Sunday, May 3, 2009

Punjab steal last-ball thriller

Kings XI Punjab v Kolkata Knight Riders, IPL

Punjab steal last-ball thriller

The Bulletin by Nishi Narayanan

May 3, 2009

Kings XI Punjab 154 for 4 (Jayawardene 52*, Katich 34) beat Kolkata Knight Riders 153 for 3 (Hodge 70*) by six wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Four dropped catches overturned Brad Hodge's impressive half-century and took Kings XI Punjab back into the top four of the IPL after they chased down 154 to beat the Kolkata Knight Riders by six wickets. The match went down to the final ball but Punjab had clearly outperformed Kolkata through the chase. Mahela Jayawardene, who scored an unbeaten 41-ball 52, and Irfan Pathan, held their nerve to take Punjab through and avoid the match being decided by the Super Over.

Top Curve
Prime Numbers

*

1
The number of last-ball wins by a team batting second this season
*

30.75
Mahela Jayawardene's average after today's game - the highest for a Punjab player
*

43
The total number of ducks in the IPL till this match
*

8
The number of bowlers used by Kolkata in today's game
*

2
The number of half-centuries scored by Hodge this season. He is the only Kolkata batsmen to score a half-century in IPL 2
*

93.0
Morne van Wyk's average - the highest by a Kolkata batsman

Bottom Curve

It was Simon Katich and Sunny Sohal's frenetic partnership - 43 balls off 26 balls - that set up the chase after Punjab lost Kumar Sangakkara in the first over. Their stand, along with a slightly more sedate one between Jayawardene and Katich - 33 off 25 balls - put Punjab ahead of the eight-ball even after they lost Katich and Yuvraj Singh before the end of the 15th over. Kolkata's bowlers, like Punjab's, conceded full tosses at the death and the final tight over from Ajit Agarkar was probably needed much earlier. Kolkata used eight bowlers and may need to review the logic of bringing in left-arm spinner Murali Kartik as the final change.

Sohal was dropped twice in two balls after which he and Katich unleashed a rain for fours and sixes - top edges and mistimed shots included - as Kolkata's bowlers struggled to keep a tight line. Chris Gayle wrapped up a poor tournament by making a mess of collecting a leading edge off Katich's bat when he was on 5. Kolkata's most productive over had been their final one where Brad Hodge and Morne van Wyk took Irfan Pathan for 21 runs. Punjab overhauled that in their fourth over with Katich and Sohal hitting 22 off Ashok Dinda.

After five overs Punjab were 44 for 1, well ahead of the required run-rate. Punjab's bowling had also been ordinary but Kolkata's batsmen, except Hodge, could not hit over the top. Brendon McCullum struggled to pick the gaps and Gayle failed to build on his steady start. The run-rate did not improve significantly even as Hodge joined McCullum at the crease after Gayle's fall.

McCullum ground out his 19 runs off 31 balls before pulling short and wide delivery off Chawla straight to Vikramjeet Malik at deep backward square-leg. His dismissal brought a spurt of energy to the innings, mostly due to Hodge. At first he rotated the strike with Sourav Ganguly and converted the loose deliveries into boundaries. He pulled Yuvraj for two consecutive fours to midwicket and then hit Abdulla over his head for a six; Ganguly opened the face of his bat to guide a four to third man and then slogged a huge six off Chawla to square leg. This six clearly boost Ganguly and he tried to attack every delivery after that. It didn't work and three balls later Ganguly top-edged a sweep to Kumar Sangakkara for a 23-ball 22.

After Ganguly's dismissal, Hodge threw his bat at everything and the 21 runs off the final over would have given Kolkata the game if it hadn't been for those dropped catches.

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