India and Afghanistan don’t have the longest history in cricket, but what they’ve built together in a short time is genuinely interesting. Afghanistan earned Test status in 2018—younger than most players on their roster—and immediately started making established teams uncomfortable. That’s not nothing.
The matches happen mostly in ICC tournaments: World Cups, T20 World Cups, and the Asia Cup. India tends to win, sure. But Afghanistan has pushed them closer than anyone expected, especially in T20s. Several matches have gone down to the final over. That’s the story worth telling—not the stats themselves, but what those near-misses say about Afghanistan’s growth.
How the Teams Match Up
India brings the deeper batting lineup, world-class spinners, and pace options that can exploit any weakness. Their top order has done well against Afghanistan’s spin, but it’s not been entirely comfortable. The death bowling has improved, which matters in tournaments where every run counts.
Afghanistan’s real weapon is their spin attack. Some of their tweakers genuinely trouble top batting lineups—they get exaggerated turn and bounce that catches players unprepared. The pace bowling has come along too, adding variety to what was once a one-dimensional attack. Their batting is aggressive, sometimes reckless, but it works in limited-overs cricket.
What Makes This Rivalry Interesting
The gap is closing. Not because India has gotten worse, but because Afghanistan has gotten better, faster than most people predicted. They beat England in the 2023 ODI World Cup. They nearly knocked off New Zealand in the 2022 T20 World Cup. These aren’t flukes anymore.
For India, these matches have become less about easy points and more about genuine competition. That’s good for cricket—it means something when Afghanistan takes the field against the big teams rather than being expected to lose.
Where They’ve Played
Most matches have been in the UAE—at Dubai and Sharjah—where the conditions suit Afghanistan’s style. Spinning tracks, slow wickets, heat that wears everyone down. Neutral venues work for both teams since neither truly calls it home.
The Bottom Line
India remains the favorite in these matchups, and the head-to-head record reflects that. But watching Afghanistan compete against the sport’s established powers has become one of cricket’s more compelling subplots. They’re not there yet—they’ve lost more than they’ve won against the top teams—but they’re getting closer every tournament.
For live scores and full scorecards, the official ICC channels and broadcasters have real-time updates. This is just the context behind the rivalry worth knowing.

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