Post-Trophy Syndrome: India's Defeat To Ireland Marks Hat-Trick Of T20I Champions Going Down In Next Match

Ireland’s landmark victory over India in the opening T20I, their first across all formats, also continued a striking trend, marking the third successive instance of newly crowned T20 World Cup champions stumbling in their very next match.

 
Follow :
Indian players celebrating after taking a wicket against Ireland in the 1st T20I | Image: X/@BCCI

As Ireland defeated India in the first T20I of the two-match series, their first win against Men in Blue across all formats, it marked a hat-trick of T20 World Cup champions going down in their next match after winning the trophy.

Ireland made their name in the history books, as a shocker batting collapse while chasing 183 from India saw the two-time, back-to-back T20WC champions crumble to a 34-run defeat in Belfast.

ALSO READ: BCCI Urged To Be Careful With Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's Debut Plan After Shocking Ireland Loss

This is the third time a T20 World Cup winner has gone down to a team just a match after winning the title. In 2022, England went down to Bangladesh by six wickets and, in fact, lost the whole series by 3-0.

After a Rohit Sharma-led India won the title back in 2024, they went down to Zimbabwe in their next match. Shubman Gill led a young and inexperienced Team India as they went down to 102/9 and failed to chase down 116 runs. India, however, won the series by 4-1.

ALSO READ: The Wait Goes On! 15-Year-Old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Misses Out On Historic Debut For Team India Against Ireland

With the Irish series just limited to two T20Is, India have very limited space to react, urgently needing to level the series on June 28th before they take on England away from home in five T20Is from July 1 onwards. The 'Captain Shreyas Iyer' era has started off roughly for India.

Ireland was put to bat first by India and was guided to 182/9 by Tucker (50 in 36 balls, with five fours and two sixes) and Gareth Delany (49 in 32 balls, with three fours and three sixes).

India started off well, reaching the 50-run mark in just the fourth over, with Abhishek Sharma (49 in 20 balls, with seven fours and two sixes) impressing. However, impressive bowling from Matthew Hollard (3/28), Matthew Humphreys (3/38) and Jai Moondra (2/26) totally unravelled India's batting as it collapsed from 45/1 to 148 all out, with the final five wickets going down for 48 runs.

Published By : Aniket Datta

Published On: 27 June 2026 at 18:30 IST