India's World Test Championship hopes are far from over, but the margin for error is shrinking.
After nine matches in the 2025-27 WTC cycle, India sit sixth in the standings with four wins, four defeats and one draw. The disappointing 2-0 home whitewash against South Africa significantly dented their campaign, leaving Shubman Gill's side with a points percentage (PCT) of 48.15.
The good news? India still have nine WTC Tests left to play. The bad news? Most of them are against teams that have troubled them in recent years.
Where India currently stand in the WTC table
| Matches | Wins | Losses | Draws | PCT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 48.15 |
Their campaign so far includes:
- 2-2 draw in England
- 2-0 home win vs West Indies
- 0-2 home defeat vs South Africa
That South Africa series has proven particularly costly, dropping India into the bottom half of the table.
Why the Afghanistan Test doesn't matter
India return to Test cricket against Afghanistan
in New Chandigarh on June 6.
However, the match will have zero impact on the WTC standings because Afghanistan are not among the nine teams participating in the World Test Championship cycle.
The one-off Test is essentially preparation for the challenges ahead.
India's remaining WTC fixtures
India have nine WTC Tests remaining:
| Matches | Wins | Losses | Draws | PCT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 48.15 |
The five-Test Border-Gavaskar Trophy at home against Australia is expected to be the defining series of India's campaign.
How many matches does India need to win?
Historically, teams qualifying for the WTC final have generally finished with a points percentage above 60-65 percent.
India currently have:
52 points from a possible 108
With nine Tests remaining, India can still earn a maximum of:
108 additional points
That means India's maximum possible total is:
160 points from 216 available
A perfect finish would leave India with a PCT of:
74.07%
Comfortably enough to reach the final.
The realistic qualification target
Most projections suggest India need at least seven wins from their remaining nine Tests to comfortably qualify without relying on other results.
Scenario 1: Seven wins, two losses
| Result | Record |
|---|---|
| Wins | 11 |
| Losses | 6 |
| Draws | 1 |
This would push India close to the mid-60s PCT range, which has historically been enough to reach the final.
Scenario 2: Six wins, two losses, one draw
This keeps India in contention but could leave qualification dependent on other results.
Scenario 3: Five wins or fewer
India would likely need several rivals to drop points and could find themselves outside the top two.
Why Australia series could decide everything
The five-Test series against Australia carries enormous weight.
Each Test win is worth 12 WTC points.
A 4-1 or 5-0 result either way would dramatically swing both teams' qualification chances.
Australia currently lead the WTC standings with a PCT of 87.50, making them India's biggest obstacle.
The biggest concerns for India
No. 3 position remains unsettled
India have rotated multiple batters through the crucial No. 3 role since the retirements of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma.
Finding stability at the top remains one of the team's biggest priorities.
Away record
India must travel to:
- New Zealand
- Sri Lanka
The last time India toured New Zealand for Tests, they suffered a 2-0 whitewash in 2020.
Home dominance has slipped
For years, India's qualification formula was simple: dominate at home and compete abroad.
The shock 2-0 defeat to South Africa showed that even home Tests can no longer be taken for granted.
What India need to do
The roadmap is relatively straightforward:
- Win both Tests in New Zealand or at least avoid defeat
- Take care of Sri Lanka away
- Beat Australia in the five-Test Border-Gavaskar Trophy
- Avoid over-rate penalties
- Build a settled batting order around Shubman Gill, Yashasvi Jaiswal and Rishabh Pant
If India can win seven of their final nine Tests, they should have one foot in the WTC Final.
Anything less, and their qualification hopes may depend on favors from other teams.
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