ICC announces Champions Trophy 2025 Team of the Tournament, excludes this big Indian cricketer

Synopsis
India claimed their third Champions Trophy title, defeating New Zealand in the final. Virat Kohli was among six Indian players named in the 'Team of the Tournament', alongside standout performances from Shreyas Iyer and KL Rahul. New Zealand's Rachin Ravindra was named Player of the Tournament.
The Black Caps have four members of their squad making the team, including Player of the Tournament Rachin Ravindra, with Mitchell Santner being named captain.
Two players from Afghanistan also made the cut after the Asian nation won their first-ever ICC Men's Champions Trophy match in their debut appearance.
At the top of the order, Ravindra was an expected selection after he scored two centuries and topped the run-scoring charts with 263.
His knock of 112 against Bangladesh was instrumental in seeing New Zealand over the line and his 108 in the semi-final against South Africa showed he is dangerous wherever he bats.
Ravindra was joined by Ibrahim Zadran at the top of the order. The 23-year-old Afghan more than left his mark on the tournament, playing a brilliant knock of 177 -- the highest-ever Champions Trophy score -- against England in the group stage.
India's Kohli slots in at number three after he finished fifth in the run-scoring charts with 218 at an average of 54.50.
Kohli made a memorable unbeaten century in his side's group-stage win over Pakistan and a crucial 84 in the semi-final win over world champions Australia.
Teammates Shreyas and Rahul join him in the middle-order after impressive tournaments.
Iyer was India's top run-scorer in the tournament, with two half-centuries helping him to 243 runs in total, while Rahul finished with an average of 140 thanks to unbeaten knocks of 42 and 34 in the semi-final and final respectively.
New Zealand's Glenn Phillips is selected at number six after a brilliant performance with the bat and in the field.
Azmatullah Omarzai is the second Afghan named in the team. The fast-bowling all-rounder had a fantastic tournament with both bat and ball, finishing with seven wickets at 20 and 126 runs at 42.00.
Santner is named as team captain after finishing the tournament with nine wickets - the joint second - but more importantly picked them at crucial times.
His knack of taking potential game-changing wickets was evident in the final. With the help of a sublime Phillips catch, he removed Gill and followed it up with the wicket of Iyer.
India's Shami capped a successful return from injury by being selected after finishing with nine wickets.
Matt Henry, unfortunately, missed the final due to a shoulder injury he picked up during New Zealand's semi-final win over South Africa but still finished as the tournament's leading wicket-taker with 10 scalps at 16.70.
He bowled his full allocation in all the three matches he played.
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)