In world of T20 Internationals, the final two overs are often a frantic scramble for survival. But for Rinku Singh, the 19th and 20th overs aren’t a pressure cooker – they are his personal playground.
Following India’s high-scoring encounter in Nagpur, the southpaw has further solidified his reputation as world’s premier “Death Over” specialist. The numbers behind his late-innings onslaughts aren’t just good; they are borderline video-game statistics.
Rinku’s efficiency when the game reaches its crescendo is unparalleled.
Here’s how he has dismantled bowling attacks during the final 12 deliveries of innings:
Balls Faced: 74
Runs Scored: 213
Strike Rate: 287.83
Boundary Count: 14 Fours, 22 Sixes
Boundary Percentage: 48.6% (Nearly every second ball goes to the rope)
Perhaps the most telling stat is Rinku’s importance to team’s total volume of scoring: 35.8% of his entire career T20I runs have been scored exclusively in the 19th and 20th overs. He doesn’t just finish games; he redefines the ceiling of what India can post.
IND vs NZ 1st T20I – Summary
India’s total of 238/7 in Nagpur didn’t just secure a win; it rewrote the history books for the venue and the rivalry against New Zealand.
A Rare Feat in Nagpur Before this match, the VCA Stadium in Nagpur was rarely known as a 200+ ground. This was only the second time a team has crossed the double-century mark at this venue. The only other instance was Sri Lanka’s 215/5 against India way back in 2009.
Highest T20I Totals vs New Zealand Rinku’s late-over blitz propelled India to their second-highest total ever against Black Caps, and third-highest by any nation:
245/5 – Australia, Auckland (2018) – Highest T20I total ever vs New Zealand
241/3 – England, Napier (2019)
238/7 – India, Nagpur (2026) – Rinku Singh’s late-overs blitz powered India’s second-highest total vs NZ
236/4 – England, Christchurch (2025)
234/4 – India, Ahmedabad (2023)
India’s 238/7 is their second-highest T20I total against New Zealand and third-highest by any team vs Black Caps.
As long as Rinku is at the crease for the final 12 balls, no target is safe, and no total is high enough.

