Kings XI Punjab 132 for 9 (Sehwag 37, Chawla 3-19, Narine 3-24) beat Kolkata Knight Riders 109 (Suryakumar 34, Sandeep 3-21) by 23 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Glenn Maxwell and David Miller failed for the first time this season,
but that didn't prevent Kings XI Punjab from extending their winning
streak to four this year, and seven overall. Sandeep Sharma
had the new ball curling around, Akshar Patel showed why he is the most
economical left-arm spinner in the tournament, and Rishi Dhawan also
kept it tight before the spearhead Mitchell Johnson finished off the
job.
It wasn't a vintage game of Twenty20 cricket, as none of the batsmen
could time the ball on a surface on which the heavyweight batting
line-up of Royal Challengers Bangalore had been shot out for 70 in the
afternoon.
On a green track with plenty of cracks in it, Kolkata Knight Riders
captain Gautam Gambhir had hoped it would be easier to bat under lights,
but his decision to bowl first backfired as the ball jagged around
after sunset. Set a seemingly straightforward target of 133, Knight
Riders lost wickets regularly and, though Suryakumar Yadav briefly
threatened to take the game close, wound up well short.
The pillars of the Knight Riders squad when the teams were revamped in
2011, Gambhir and Yusuf Pathan, continued to have miserable seasons.
Gambhir pushed himself down to No. 3 after three zeroes in a row, but
nearly had a golden duck again, only for Sandeep to put down a
difficult, diving return catch. There was further relief for Gambhir as
he got a single to fine leg to score his first run of the tournament,
but minutes later he handed a catch to short extra cover.
If Gambhir's IPL troubles have been confined to this season, Yusuf has
struggled to recapture the heights of the first cycle of the tournament.
Once again he looked woefully out of touch, lbw for 3 after being
bringing his bat down late on a Rishi Dhawan delivery. He rarely bowls
these days and isn't the quickest in the field either, all of which
combine to put his place under serious scrutiny.
Knight Riders openers couldn't get any momentum against Sandeep and
Johnson, with both dismissed for single-digit scores. Chris Lynn
couldn't recreate the form that yielded a quickfire 45 in his first game
of the season earlier this week, and Knight Riders' chances were nearly
extinguished once Robin Uthappa was run out by a precise throw from
George Bailey at cover in the 13th over. Knight Riders were 62 for 6,
looking for a miracle. It didn't arrive.
They wouldn't have expected to be in that position after the performance of their bowlers. Knight Riders' decision to bring in Piyush Chawla
for Vinay Kumar, who bowled them to a last-over win two days earlier,
paid off as Chawla bamboozled Virender Sehwag with a googly, and
benefited from the long boundaries in Abu Dhabi by getting big guns
Miller and Bailey caught in the deep.
Chawla's intervention came after some hostile new-ball bowling from
Morne Morkel, who tormented the Indians in the top order with his
145-plus kmph deliveries, and got the prized scalp of Maxwell with a
legstump yorker. Kings XI collapsed from 101 for 4 to 132 for 9 against
the wiles of Chawla and Sunil Narine, who took three in an over. It
didn't matter, though, as Knight Riders' batting woes continued.
Siddarth Ravindran is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
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