If Abhishek opens and Tilak bats at No. 3, then India have a choice for the remaining top-order slot:
- keep Samson to preserve the right-left rhythm in the top three, or
- replace him with Kishan and risk a left-left-left top three
A left-left-left top order is not automatically flawed. It can be explosive on flat pitches. But it is also easier to plan against. Opponents can attack with repeatable angles, similar fields, and clearer matchup bowling in the first six overs. At World Cup level, "easy to map" becomes a genuine weakness.
That is where Samson's selection argument still holds, even with modest runs: he keeps India's top order from becoming one-note.
So should India drop Samson or keep himIndia should keep Samson for now - but only with a clear, short runway.
Keeping him is sensible because it preserves the balance India are likely to want when Tilak returns. Dropping him immediately would solve one short-term problem while creating a longer-term one: a top order that can tilt heavily left and become easier to control in the powerplay.
However, India cannot keep carrying early dismissals indefinitely. Samson doesn't need to score a fifty every game to justify selection. What he needs is consistent powerplay involvement - innings that do not end before the fielding restrictions have even been properly exploited.
If the pattern continues - rushed shots, early exits, minimal powerplay influence - then India should move on. But if India move on, they should not do it in a way that makes the top three uniformly left-handed once Tilak is back.