Sanju Samson and former RR teammate swap jerseys after Indic VS Eng 5th T20I 2025 [In Picture]
Indian cricket Sanja Samson On Monday, February 3rd, he took the social media to share a picture with the English captain Jos Buttler, showing two shades of jerseys. The moment followed after the end of the T20I series with five matches, and the last game played at Wankhede Stadium on Sunday, February 2nd.
First hitting the hosts, they put an impressive screen, ending at 247/9 in their 20 accessories. Abhishek Sharma was an extraordinary performer of India, breaking the extraordinary 135 of the 54 balls, including seven -four and 13 sixties. His knock has set a record for the highest individual result by the Indians in the T20IS.
In response, England never looked like it was in the chase, as Indian bowlers were constantly taking shots at regular intervals. Visitors threw out only 97 in 10.3 additions, losing a huge 150 ride. With this dominant victory, men at Blue won the 4-1 series.
On Monday, Sanja Samson shared a picture with England Jos Buttler on Instagram stories, where the duo was seen exchanging jerseys. The two of them share a great relationship, playing together for Rajasthan Royals In IPL from 2018 to 2024.
Indian cricket wrote a picture:
“My brother from England, Josettan.”
Sanja Samson will continue Captain Rajasthan Royals in the 2025 season, while Buttler will be seen representing a Gujarat Titans.
Both Sanja Samson and Jos Buttler fought for races in the T20I series in five games
Despite the fact that India won the T20I series with five matches against England 4-1, Sanja Samson had a challenging series. Open dough scored only 51 runs through five insertions, with a disappointing average of 10.20, with the highest only 26.
On the other hand, Captain of England, JoS Buttler had a strong start to the series, scoring 68 of 44 balls in an introductory game. He supported it with a solid 45 in another match. However, he has fought in the last three games, managing only 33 rides. Overall, Buttler ended up with 146 rides in five ups, an average of 29.20, including half a century.
Edited by Ankush Das