Friday, March 6


The gun bowler he is, Jasprit Bumrah has seen countless batters take that panicked, ill-fated sideward step from his line of fire.

Brian Bennett’s leg-side movement, though, felt different. Even as he set his base, exposing his stumps to one who makes a living out of uprooting them, the Zimbabwe opener seemed calm and secure. His actions were not out of desperation, nor was it because he ran out of options against the premier pacer.

It was exactly what he had planned, and as if he knew Bumrah was going to follow him with a sharp bouncer, Bennett produced a remarkable tennis-style flat-batted swat, dismissing the world’s best bowler for a majestic six over long-on. The maximum also marked his third half-century in the ICC T20 World Cup 2026. The Zimbabwe dugout had no qualms in showing its adulation, though even without the milestone, some of his peers and mentors would have been tempted to stand and applaud the sheer audacity of the shot.

Watch the ball closely

“Yeah, Bumrah was always going to be a tough bowler to face. [It was my] first time facing him. Obviously, he is a world-class bowler. So, my thought process was to just watch the ball as close as I can, and just let my body do the action. The ball was in my zone, and I just hit it,” Bennett said in the post-match press conference after his unbeaten 97 against India in Chennai.

The media interaction following that memorable innings revealed more than just the youngster’s technical know-how and sky-high ambitions; it also highlighted his likeable character, perfectly captured when he corrected a journalist who failed to recognise him with a measured, “I’m Brian Bennett.”

With 277 runs in just five outings, Bennett was making a name for himself on the world stage. His average sat at a staggering 277 — having been dismissed only once in the T20 World Cup till then. Even though this number came down to 146 after scoring a 13-ball 15 against South Africa in his last game, what he achieved in the tournament was almost unheard of for a T20 opener.

It’s one thing to bat through an innings in Test cricket, where strike rate is an insignificant column in the statistics page (maybe not for England’s Bazballers), but to do so in T20s — a format increasingly defined by fleeting cameos and high-risk hitting — Bennett’s brand of batsmanship is as rare as a vinyl record in a world of digital music.

When asked if he looked at himself as an anchor in Zimbabwe’s batting line-up, Bennett said: “[My job is to] give Zimbabwe a good start in the PowerPlay and then sort of just carry on that momentum throughout the middle overs with the likes of (Sikandar) Raza, the guys who can hit the big sixes and stuff,” Bennett said on February 26.

“I wouldn’t say it’s too much of an anchor role. I do go out there and play positive cricket and try to get runs at those higher strike rates. But the pitches in Sri Lanka were a bit different. So, maybe that lower strike rate came into play. I just try to do the simple things better.”

Stroke player

On his modus operandi to find the boundary, Bennett explained: “I don’t do much power hitting. I think of myself as more of a stroke player. I try to get into good positions, which enables me to hit those sixes. If I’m in a strong position and I can get my hands to the ball, that gives me the best chance to hit those sixes.”

Bennett’s returns justify his words. His 292 runs in this edition, second only to Pakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan (383), came at a strike rate of 134.56.

Known for piercing gaps over clearing the ropes, Bennett’s priorities are laid bare by the numbers: the Zimbabwean prodigy’s 32 fours in the T20 showpiece [along with Aiden Markram and Tim Seifert] are second only to Farhan’s 37, while Bennett’s seven maximums are the fewest among this edition’s top-14 run-scorers.

“If they (bowlers) miss [their mark], it’s got to go. But also, they are allowed to bowl good balls. I try to not get too ahead of myself and do something I shouldn’t be doing. Six overs are longer than you think. I don’t have the big biceps to hit over the top and get a six. But definitely, I like strokeplaying and hitting the gap even inside the PowerPlay,” Bennett had said in a video posted by the ICC on February 19.

And this method has worked extremely well for the 22-year-old. In fact, since Bennett made his T20I debut on December 7, 2023, no one has scored more runs in the format (1,888 runs in 58 innings) than him. His strike rate of 143.68, to go with an average of 36.30, is quite creditable for somebody who has been tasked to be the glue that holds the innings together.

“Brian Bennett is Brian Bennett. His role is just to bat as long as he can bat. While you may think I am being funny, but only people who understand Brian would know what I am talking about,” skipper Raza had said ahead of the Super Eight game against the West Indies in Mumbai.

‘Brian must bat’

“His role is to bat. For as long as he can. That’s it. And that means 20 overs, 15 overs, 18 overs — doesn’t matter. Brian must just bat,” Raza added.

Bennett’s fingerprints on Zimbabwe’s triumphs are as unmistakable as the Milky Way in a desert night sky. While his unbeaten half-centuries in Zimbabwe’s heists over Australia and Sri Lanka are recent examples, the overall data tells an even more definitive story: he averages 52.09 in Zimbabwe’s victories, a figure that plummets to 26.55 in the African team’s defeats. The correlation is simple: Zimbabwe wins when Bennett fires.

Bennett’s playing style is just as uncomplicated. And it’s not just him saying that. “He is one guy who does not make it complicated at all. That is a great quality. He doesn’t think. But it’s good. He brings simplicity, and because of that nature, nothing seems to faze or bother him,” Raza told ICC.

Zimbabwe fielding coach Stuart Matsikenyeri echoes it, saying Bennett is a “great student of the game.”

“He’s a sponge and he’s very hungry to learn. He does more listening than talking. He’s always looking to get better the next day. In the presser, he kept trying to say, ‘I just keep it simple.’ That is his character,” Matsikenyeri said in the mixed zone after the Super Eight game against India.

Exceptional and exponential

Bennett’s growth has been exceptional and exponential. Just four years ago, he was swimming in the kids’ section of the cricket pool: the under-19 World Cup. But since being thrown into the deep end, Bennett has swam ashore with authority and poise.

In his short career, he has already scored a Test ton against England in England, a fourth-innings half-century against Bangladesh, and an ODI hundred against Ireland.

Brian Bennett of Zimbabwe points at his place on the batting Honours Board at Trent Bridge.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

Where does Bennett go from here now that he has proved his mettle against the creme de la creme of international cricket, that too in a World Cup?

“The sky’s the limit for Brian. He’s a very highly motivated youngster. It’s scary that he’s only 22. It’s exciting to see where he’s going to go. I wouldn’t put a bench on him because I think there are a lot of good things ahead of him,” Matsikenyeri added.

Even as he became the toast of the town during his breakthrough tournament, Bennett’s outlook on cricket and life remained centred on opportunity and growth. “The main thing I’ve learnt is that the sun is going to rise tomorrow. So, no matter what happens today, you’ve always got another opportunity tomorrow to try and do better,” Bennett told the ICC.

The stoic batter seems to live by the timeless advice found in H. Jackson Brown Jr.’s Life’s Little Instruction Book: ‘The best preparation for tomorrow is doing your best today.’

If the T20 World Cup was any indication, the future is bright for Bennett and Zimbabwe.



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