Dense Fog Plays Spoilsport As 4th T20I In Lucknow Is Abandoned; Series Heads To Ahmedabad Decider
A thick blanket of fog over Lucknow’s Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium forced officials to call off the fourth T20 International between India and South Africa on Wednesday night, disappointing a near‑capacity crowd and television viewers across both countries. Match referee and umpires conducted multiple inspections over almost three hours before finally deeming visibility unsafe for play around 9:25–9:30 pm IST.
No Toss, Six Inspections And Growing Frustration
The toss, scheduled for 6:30 pm, was first delayed as dense fog rolled across the outfield and gradually thickened under the floodlights, making it difficult to see boundary riders and high catches. Umpires returned to the middle roughly every 30 minutes for a total of five to six inspections, but with visibility still hovering around 50–100 metres, they concluded that players’ safety would be compromised if the game went ahead.
Both teams briefly warmed up on the field but soon retreated to the dressing rooms as conditions refused to improve, while Indian all‑rounder Hardik Pandya was even seen wearing a mask amid the mix of fog and lingering smog. When the “match abandoned due to excessive fog” announcement finally flashed on the stadium screens, thousands of fans vented their anger on social media over the scheduling of a night T20I in North India’s peak winter.
First Major International In India Lost To Fog
Local weather services had issued a yellow fog alert for Lucknow, with typical evening visibility in the 50–200 metre range, yet this was the first time an international cricket match in India has been completely washed out by fog rather than rain. Reports noted that air‑quality levels in the city were in the “poor” to “very poor” category, intensifying concerns about players’ ability to track the white ball against a hazy, grey‑brown sky.
The abandonment sparked a fresh debate over winter scheduling, coming just months after officials shifted a planned November Test from Delhi to Kolkata owing to severe pollution concerns in the capital. Fans and commentators questioned why a December night game was allotted to a venue in the fog‑prone Indo‑Gangetic belt, calling for tighter coordination between cricket boards and meteorological agencies.
Series Situation And Ahmedabad Decider
With the Lucknow fixture cancelled, India retain a 2–1 lead in the five‑match series following wins in Thiruvananthapuram and Guwahati and South Africa’s victory in the third T20I at Nagpur. The focus now shifts to the fifth and final T20I, to be played under lights at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on 19 December, which will decide whether India extend their unbeaten run in bilateral T20I series to 14 or South Africa square the rubber 2–2.
The Ahmedabad clash is expected to draw a massive crowd and will be closely watched by selectors, with only a handful of games left before India lock in their squad for the T20 World Cup early next year.

