
Following India’s hard-fought T20 World Cup triumph earlier this year, the national team selection has quickly evolved into a high-stakes chess match. The latest tactical shift occurred ahead of the second T20I against England at Old Trafford, where wicketkeeper-batter Sanju Samson was dropped from the playing XI. Samson, who had just captured the Player of the Tournament award during India’s world championship run, was sidelined after scoring 5, 0, and 1 in his previous three outings across the United Kingdom.
In his place, the team management handed a historic international debut to 15-year-old batting sensation Vaibhav Suryavanshi. While the prodigy’s inclusion sparked massive excitement among fans, it also raised intense debate within the cricketing fraternity. Legendary Indian spinner Ravichandran Ashwin has now voiced his concerns, delivering a candid assessment of how the management handles raw form versus proven equity.
Ravichandran Ashwin weighs in on Gautam Gambhir after Sanju Samson is left out of the 2nd T20I
Speaking passionately on his YouTube channel, Ashwin claimed that everyone within the dressing room, including head coach Gautam Gambhir and the core support staff, is fully aware that dropping Samson so abruptly feels inherently unfair. Given Samson’s immense role in securing the World Cup silverware, Ashwin expressed deep concern over the psychological toll such a quick axing takes on a player’s morale and net sessions.
“Right now, I’m concerned. I’m worried because Sanju Samson has been dropped from the team so quickly. What will Sanju be thinking now? How motivated will he be when he goes to practice in the nets? At the moment, you already have three left-handers in the top order: Abhishek Sharma, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, and Ishan Kishan. Now, they will consider Sanju for No. 3, I’m telling you.. Everyone knows, including the coaching staff and Gautam Gambhir, that this hasn’t been fair to Sanju. So now they’ll have to manage the situation somehow,” Ashwin stated.
The veteran off-spinner noted that with left-handers like Abhishek Sharma, Suryavanshi, and Ishan Kishan dominating the top order, Samson’s role is shifting dramatically. Ashwin expects the management to now look at Samson primarily as a backup option for Kishan at the number three spot. While acknowledging that a leadership group must occasionally make brutal selection decisions for the greater good of the squad, Ashwin firmly argued that Samson had built up enough “return on investment” to warrant a much longer rope. He stressed that a high-performing asset should not be discarded after a few quiet days at the crease, placing the responsibility on Gambhir to effectively manage the fallout of this selection dilemma.
Ashwin also questions the India dressing room after Samson’s omission
Beyond the technicalities of top-order balance, Ashwin leveled a much deeper concern regarding the structural integrity of contemporary Indian cricket selection. He openly questioned whether the noise, hyper-criticism, and fast-moving narratives generated on social media platforms are subtly permeating the inner sanctum of the team management.
“I’m concerned about one thing. Are social media narratives and all the outside noise finding their way into the team? Is that influencing the decision-making? That’s what worries me. I’ve been watching cricket for a long time and have seen many leaders in the Indian team. They never allowed outside noise to enter the dressing room, and that’s exactly how it should be,” he added.
Ashwin warned that if outside pressure and internet discourse are actively influencing tactical calls, it represents a dangerous precedent for the Men in Blue moving forward. Drawing from his extensive experience under legendary captains of the past, the veteran spinner reiterated that the hallmark of great Indian leadership has always been the ability to build an impenetrable wall around the locker room. By keeping external public relations campaigns and fan volatility at bay, classic teams preserved their clarity of thought. For Ashwin, the rapid nature of Samson’s omission serves as an alarming hint that this vital protective boundary might be under threat in the current era.






