Impostor Baba Sidhu, who predicts wholesale prices, trashes Mohammad Aamir, says throne is not obtained by begging.

News India Live, Digital Desk: India defeated England by 7 runs in the semi-finals and secured a place in the final, after which Sidhu made a sharp attack on Aamir by sharing a video. Aamir had predicted that India would neither reach the semi-finals nor be able to defeat England, but Team India proved all these claims wrong on the field. ‘Aamir’s Predictions’ on Sidhu’s target. Navjot Singh Sidhu made fun of Aamir’s statements in his video and said some important things: ‘If it goes, it’s an arrow, if it goes, it’s a stone’: Sidhu said that some people in our neighborhood (Pakistan) are accused of making false predictions. Have a hobby. If it goes right then it becomes Baba and if it goes wrong then it is shrugged off by calling it just a ‘guess’. Sanju Samson’s Comeback: Sidhu sarcastically said that Aamir had claimed that West Indies and South Africa would move ahead, but as soon as Sanju Samson’s comeback happened, both those teams had to ‘go back’. Decisions are taken in the battlefield: Sidhu made it clear that cricket The results are not decided by predictions, but by performance in the battlefield. He said, “Guru does not get the throne by begging, Thotha Chana Baje Ghana.” Aamir’s answer: ‘England lost because the catch was missed’ After his prediction was proved wrong, Aamir blamed the defeat on Sanju Samson’s catch dropped by Harry Brook. Aamir says: Had Brook not dropped the catch of Samson (who scored 89 runs off 42 balls), England would have achieved this target an over earlier. He also acknowledged that India has played excellent cricket throughout the tournament, but he is still adamant that England could have won the match. India vs England: Match SummaryIndia’s score: 253/7 (20 overs) – T20 World Cup Knockout Highest score. Key performances: Sanju Samson (89 runs), economical bowling by Jasprit Bumrah. Result: India defeated England by 7 runs and booked a ticket for the final against New Zealand on March 8.

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