The T20 format has exploded in popularity since its World Cup debut in 2007. But the blueprint for today’s boundary-hitting frenzy was drawn in a forgotten India-England group game at Durban. Yuvraj Singh’s unforgettable knock 19 years ago foreshadowed the revolution.
Electing to bat, India racked up 218/4. Sehwag (68 off 52) and Gambhir (58 off 41) laid a solid platform with 136 runs for the first wicket. Enter Yuvraj: 58 runs off just 16 balls, featuring seven massive sixes and three fours. The highlight? Six consecutive sixes in Stuart Broad’s over – a record that still stands as the quickest T20I fifty by a full member against another.
England’s reply was spirited, mustering 200/6 in 20 overs, but they couldn’t bridge the 18-run gap. This match highlighted T20’s core thrill: relentless chasing and impossible targets.
Today, in the 2026 T20 World Cup semis, India and England renew rivalries. With Finn Allen’s 33-ball ton as precedent, 250+ totals feel chaseable. Yuvraj’s aggression set the template for power-hitting eras in IPL, Big Bash, and beyond.
This semifinal clash carries echoes of 2007. Cricket’s shortest format owes its DNA to that one blistering innings.