Chennai Super Kings 177 for 4 (Raina 73*) beat Royal Challengers Bangalore 175 (Kohli 70*, Bollinger 1-20) by six wickets
How did Chennai win this? How did Bangalore lose this? Chennai always seemed to be lagging behind but surged like a tidal wave towards the end, with the odd run-filled over now and then, to storm into their third IPL final in four seasons. At the forefront was the feisty Suresh Raina, who pulled out the big shots through the latter half of the chase to set up an improbable win. The defeat makes Bangalore's path to the final - and beyond - tougher. They will have to win the second Qualifier on Saturday, if they are to meet Chennai in the final at the MA Chidambaram stadium, where the hosts have been unbeaten all season.
Bangalore will look back and rue at a few poor overs. There were full tosses and length deliveries galore and Chennai capitalised in some style. Virat Kohli bowled a slew of full tosses in the ninth over to leak 16 runs, and Abhimanyu Mithun kept bowling length deliveries in the 13th over, bleeding 23 runs. It included a fabulously carved six over the covers as Raina went down on a bent knee, to follow his muscled heave over long-off. Even then, the equation - 82 from 42 balls - seemed a tough proposition and it got tighter when it came down to 58 from 24. Chris Gayle had led from front with a parsimonious spell that read 4-0-19-0 as he fired in the skidders and the occasional yorker to pin down Chennai.
But Raina wasn't done yet, and he ramped it up style in the 17th over, from Zaheer Khan, who had been exemplary in his opening three-over spell. Raina's two sixes over midwicket, a thumping pull and a clubbed swing, were sandwiched by a bottom-hand powered six over wide long-on by MS Dhoni, who however fell in the same over. Zaheer went for 20 runs in that over and Chennai had well and truly seized the momentum.
More agony awaited Bangalore in the 19th over, bowled by S Aravind. Albie Morkel crashed a slower ball over long-on and clubbed a full toss over long-off before Raina killed another full toss over the midwicket boundary. That 21-run over left Chennai needing 12 off the final over by Daniel Vettori and Morkel dragged a four to wide long-on, before walloping the fourth ball over midwicket to win the contest.
Until those frenetic end overs, Bangalore were well on their way to becoming the first team to enter the final. The big question before the game was whether Bangalore would deflate like cheap party balloons if Gayle went out early. They answered that in an emphatic manner, as Kohli powered them to a competitive total.
Bangalore were in danger of slipping into free-fall after Gayle fell cheaply, trapped by R Aswhin, but Kohli and Luke Pomersbach ensured they stayed afloat. While Kohli batted with calculated aggression, Pomersbach counterattacked, taking 17 runs in the 15th over, off Dwayne Bravo. A murderous heave to wide long-on, a slash to third man and a flat six over midwicket were the highlights. Kohli, though, was the person who sculpted and shaped Bangalore's innings. Two shots in particular reflected the assurance in his knock. In the 13th over, he sashayed back to a back-of-length delivery from Raina to unfurl a peachy punch to the cover-point boundary. Then, off the final ball of the 16th over, he leaned forward to play a classy lofted whip over wide long-on Ashwin. He went on to produce two more screaming sixes - over long-on and covers - off Morkel in the 19th over, to push Bangalore to a good total but Raina decided to gatecrash the party.
Showing posts with label Chennai Super Kings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chennai Super Kings. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
All-round Chennai cruise to fourth straight win
Chennai Super Kings 149 for 2 (Hussey 79*, Raina 61) beat Rajasthan Royals 147 for 6 (Dravid 66, Watson 32, Jakati 2-22) by eight wickets
Chennai Super Kings continued their dominance at home and eased to a fourth-successive win in conditions where power play took a backseat to opportunistic strokemaking, and stamina and steady consolidation was more crucial than short outbursts of runs. The sweltering Chennai heat and a slow pitch made it a tiring ordeal for batsmen, and it seemed at one stage that Rajasthan Royals, riding on the back of Rahul Dravid's fluent half-century, would have the better of the contest. But an inspired recovery from Chennai's faltering bowlers and a controlled approach to the chase from Suresh Raina and Michael Hussey set up Chennai's comfortable win - their fifth in five games at home this season.
The Rajasthan openers, Dravid and Shane Watson, had displayed excellent determination to occupy the crease and set a strong foundation to their team's innings. The pair ran well between wickets, rotated the strike, picked the gaps to scramble back for the twos, before Dravid took charge against the spinners. He pulled R Ashwin twice in an over to the midwicket fence, reverse-swept and punched Suraj Randiv for three fours in an over to different parts of the ground. The highlight of the first ten overs was his inside-out drive over extra cover off Shadab Jakati, as Rajasthan coasted to 86 in the first ten overs.
The trigger for the fightback was a brilliant return catch from Jakati off Watson, as he put his hands up and intercepted a ferocious thwack back towards him in the 11th over. Despite an encouraging run-rate, and with plenty of ammunition left in the batting for a surge at the death, the desire for clearing the ropes overrode any thought of building the innings for a few more overs. Ashok Menaria holed out needlessly against Ashwin, and Johan Botha, who had picked a cheeky boundary, succumbed when he tried to use force against Jakati. Dravid was swimming in sweat in the Chennai heat and fell to a tiring shot, and not long after, the seamers returned to contain the flow further. A couple of fours from Ross Taylor was offset by a double-strike from Albie Morkel in the penultimate over, and Rajasthan only managed 61 in the last ten, losing six wickets.
The wicket of M Vijay was an early boost for Rajasthan but some sloppy fielding, a difficult opportunity that was grassed, and the maturity of the Raina-Hussey combine put paid to Rajasthan's hopes. Stuart Binny conceded eight runs in the field, through a misfield and an overthrow, and was listless with the ball. Raina was let off by Watson diving full stretch in the deep, but otherwise there weren't any opportunities.
Like the Chennai bowlers had done in the first ten overs, Rajasthan's attack erred in line and length, giving the batsmen timely opportunities to pierce the field. Siddharth Trivedi bowled too often down the leg side, and the more accurate Watson and Botha were worked around. With both batsmen settling in well, left-arm spinner Nayan Doshi was carted for two sixes in the 11th over - the same passage in the Rajasthan innings had marked a decisive turn of events. As the shoulders drooped, Binny doled freebies outside off which Hussey cut for successive fours before delivering the same treatment to Menaria on the leg side. Raina's dismissal was against the run of play, but his knock, along with Hussey's, had made a relatively one-sided contest out of a potential cracker.
Rajasthan Royals 147/6 (20/20 ov)
Chennai Super Kings 149/2 (18.4/20 ov)
Chennai Super Kings won by 8 wickets (with 8 balls remaining)
- Indian Premier League - 43rd match
- Twenty20 match | 2011 season
- Played at MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chepauk, Chennai
- 4 May 2011 - day/night (20-over match)
| Rajasthan Royals innings (20 overs maximum) | R | B | 4s | 6s | SR | |||
| SR Watson | c & b Jakati | 32 | 26 | 5 | 0 | 123.07 | ||
| R Dravid | c Vijay b Randiv | 66 | 51 | 10 | 0 | 129.41 | ||
| AL Menaria | c Vijay b Ashwin | 2 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 25.00 | ||
| J Botha | c Raina b Jakati | 8 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 133.33 | ||
| LRPL Taylor | c Hussey b Morkel | 20 | 14 | 2 | 0 | 142.85 | ||
| AM Rahane | c & b Morkel | 4 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 50.00 | ||
| STR Binny | not out | 7 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 100.00 | ||
| DH Yagnik† | not out | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 100.00 | ||
| Extras | (lb 5, w 1, nb 1) | 7 | ||||||
| Total | (6 wickets; 20 overs) | 147 | (7.35 runs per over) | |||||
| Did not bat SK Warne*, ND Doshi, SK Trivedi |
| Fall of wickets1-86 (Watson, 10.1 ov), 2-92 (Menaria, 12.2 ov), 3-109 (Botha, 14.3 ov), 4-117 (Dravid, 15.4 ov),5-139 (Rahane, 18.3 ov), 6-139 (Taylor, 18.4 ov) |
| Bowling | O | M | R | W | Econ | |||
| JA Morkel | 4 | 0 | 24 | 2 | 6.00 | |||
| DE Bollinger | 4 | 0 | 28 | 0 | 7.00 | (1nb) | ||
| R Ashwin | 4 | 0 | 36 | 1 | 9.00 | (1w) | ||
| SB Jakati | 4 | 0 | 22 | 2 | 5.50 | |||
| S Randiv | 4 | 0 | 32 | 1 | 8.00 |
| Chennai Super Kings innings (target: 148 runs from 20 overs) | R | B | 4s | 6s | SR | |||
| MEK Hussey | not out | 79 | 55 | 8 | 1 | 143.63 | ||
| M Vijay | lbw b Botha | 5 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 83.33 | ||
| SK Raina | c Botha b Trivedi | 61 | 51 | 3 | 1 | 119.60 | ||
| JA Morkel | not out | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | - | ||
| Extras | (w 4) | 4 | ||||||
| Total | (2 wickets; 18.4 overs) | 149 | (7.98 runs per over) | |||||
| Did not bat MS Dhoni*†, S Badrinath, S Anirudha, R Ashwin, DE Bollinger, SB Jakati, S Randiv |
| Fall of wickets1-8 (Vijay, 1.5 ov), 2-145 (Raina, 18.3 ov) |
| Bowling | O | M | R | W | Econ | |||
| ND Doshi | 2 | 0 | 24 | 0 | 12.00 | |||
| J Botha | 4 | 0 | 22 | 1 | 5.50 | |||
| SR Watson | 4 | 0 | 27 | 0 | 6.75 | |||
| SK Trivedi | 3.4 | 0 | 37 | 1 | 10.09 | (3w) | ||
| SK Warne | 3 | 0 | 14 | 0 | 4.66 | |||
| STR Binny | 1 | 0 | 12 | 0 | 12.00 | |||
| AL Menaria | 1 | 0 | 13 | 0 | 13.00 | (1w) |
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