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Netherlands' team strategise during a practice session. (PTI Photo)
NEW DELHI: The idea of minnow teams always sat uneasily with T20 cricket. The ongoing T20 World Cup is exposing why. Short formats compress power, preparation and pressure into spaces where pedigree matters less than conviction.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!As Namibia prepare for their tournament opener against the Netherlands at the Arun Jaitley Stadium here, both teams arrive knowing they are no longer gatecrashers. In fact, they are participants in a competition increasingly defined by those brave enough to punch above their weight. Both are slotted alongside India, Pakistan and USA in Group A, a pool that has already hinted it will be anything but predictable.
The Dutch come into the game nursing frustration.
Against Pakistan, they bossed long phases, read conditions well and pushed the favourites into corners, only to unravel in the final stretch. Fast bowler Paul van Meekeren captured the mood with blunt honesty. “I want to be very clear: Pakistan didn’t win the game. We lost the game against ourselves.”
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It was a line that underlined not defeat but missed opportunity. Two points were there for the taking; instead, the Netherlands now carry the burden of knowing they cannot afford another slip from a winning position.
Yet, if history is any guide, this Dutch side thrives when written off. They have beaten England and South Africa in T20 World Cups before, and their current core is steeped in franchise and county-level grind.Batting lynchpin Colin Ackermann spoke about embracing chaos rather than fearing it.“Part of the DNA of this Netherlands team is that we take ownership of our performances and our roles. We learn from past experiences. When we got off the bus in Delhi, coach Ryan Cook said the past is the past — there’s nothing we can do about it, and we must look forward to the next game,” the 34-year-old said.
“We have great self-belief as a team. We’ve shown in the past that we can compete with Test nations.”Namibia, meanwhile, arrive with quiet confidence. They may not have played yet in this edition, but winning memories of past T20 World Cups — victories over Sri Lanka (in 2022) and other higher-ranked sides — still lingers.Captain Gerhard Erasmus has built a side unwilling to be boxed into labels like “minnows” or “Associate” team. “We respect every opponent, but we don’t see ourselves as passengers,” Erasmus said. “When the tournament starts, rankings don’t walk onto the field, players do. You should not limit yourself with labels.”



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