Let’s consider the Sourav Ganguly era as a second example. It began with the ICC Knockout tournament in Nairobi at the start of the 2000-01 season and ended with the Videocon Triangular series at the end of the 2005 season. Much like the Kohli era, the Ganguly era has given rise to narratives. India won one final and lost ten under Ganguly’s captaincy (and shared one title in 2002 after a final was rained off twice in Sri Lanka). Yet, it is the one final that India won, at Lord’s against a relatively weak English side in 2002 that forms one of the iconic images of that era. So much so, that a chapter in Ganguly’s memoir , is titled «Waving the shirt at Lord’s».The point is not that the Ganguly-era side did worse in finals than they did in other games. In those days, it became an article of faith, for instance, that Sachin Tendulkar did not come good in «crunch» matches. The point is that these tropes, along with the idea that the Kohli-era side has a problem in «big ICC knockout matches» are all features of the same problem — that of the arbitrary attribution of value to a very small number of cricket matches.Under Ganguly, India won 50 and lost 43 CL matches. In MW matches, their record was 19 wins and 18 defeats. In that period India played a lot of fixtures against weaker teams including ten against Associate-member teams of the ICC, of which India won nine. Apart from the World Cup semi-final of 2003 against Kenya, these tended to be CL fixtures. The figures suggest that India’s success rate under Ganguly in MW and CL matches was about the same.

At best, it could be argued that winning MW fixtures has been marginally more difficult for India than winning CL fixtures has been. If you consider that series or tournaments in which India are put into must-win situations are likely to be more difficult than series or tournaments in which they are dominant, then this small difference in win rates can be put down to this difference in opposition.Bluntly, there is no evidence in the record for the proposition that a «big» competitive match is more difficult than the average or bilateral, as it is, often pejoratively, referred to. Indeed, it would be very odd if there was such evidence. The laws, the players, the grounds — all remain the same. Why should the success rate be significantly different?In essence, there is no effect evident in the record of «pressure» having an impact on the outcome of a fixture. Results are shaped by the relative quality of both teams. Teams that contest series or tournaments that get to must-win situations are more evenly matched than teams that are involved in one-sided series. The occasional final that sticks in the memory is an unreliable measure of either the character or the quality of a professional cricket team. A final is the same as any other ODI or T20I or Test match we watch — a competitive international match that its contestants want to win.

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