The T20 World Cup 2026 drama unfolds in New Delhi’s Arun Jaitley Stadium, where Namibia meets India in match 18 on Thursday. Namibia captain Gerhard Erasmus has ignited controversy by questioning the fairness of training schedules ahead of this high-stakes encounter.
Following a disheartening seven-wicket loss to Netherlands in Tuesday’s morning fixture, Namibia sought evening practices to gear up for the day-night battle. Coach Craig Williams emphasized adapting to floodlights against India, the defending champions.
Disappointment struck when Namibia received only a midday slot on Wednesday. In contrast, India trained under lights on both preceding evenings. Canada, preparing for a Friday 3 PM game against UAE, also snagged a night session.
Erasmus laid it bare during Wednesday’s presser: ‘Namibia lacks night cricket infrastructure – that’s our core hurdle. Apart from players versed in NPL, ILT20, or past World Cups, our lads aren’t floodlight regulars. No night training for us pre-India, while they got two bites and Canada one. Interpret as you will… We’ll fight Namibian-style.’
Turning motivational, he rallied his youth: ‘This is huge – 40,000 fans, lights blazing, facing IPL heroes we’ve watched endlessly. Stay in the moment; don’t fear the giants.’
The row underscores associate nations’ struggles in global events. India, with home advantage and superior facilities, enters favorites. Yet Erasmus’s defiance signals Namibia’s intent to disrupt. Will unequal prep prove decisive, or can raw determination level the field? The Thursday thriller promises answers.