Kolkata Knight Riders 150 for 1 (Gambhir 63*, Uthappa 46) beat Kings XI Punjab 149 for 8 (Sehwag 72, Chawla 3-19) by nine wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Gautam Gambhir's
third successive fifty anchored Kolkata Knight Riders' chase and
steered them to a nine-wicket win over table-toppers Kings XI Punjab.
The Knight Riders bowlers had pinned Kings XI down to 149 - the second
time in the tournament they were kept to less than 150 - despite a swift
72 from Virender Sehwag.
The opening pair of Robin Uthappa and Gambhir - with two century stands
in their last few games - set the platform for the chase, racing to 68
in seven overs. Uthappa's fluency was evident early on as he laid into
Sandeep Sharma's second over, taking three fours off him, before
collecting another 18 off Mitchell Johnson. Uthappa's 28-ball 46 brought
the asking rate under control and put the chase firmly within Knight
Riders' reach.
Conscious, perhaps, of the fact that another batting meltdown could end
up becoming the symbol of Knight Riders' campaign, Gambhir and Manish
Pandey played mostly percentage cricket in their unbeaten 82-run stand,
which took the team home with two overs to spare. There were a few
run-out chances but Kings XI did not have the best day in the field-
George Bailey's dropped catch off Gambhir in the 17th over was the best
example of that.
Kings XI, who had opted for a seam-centric attack, would have felt the
absence of a second spinner, especially after Akshar Patel kept Gambhir
and Pandey quiet for a couple of overs in the middle. However, the
biggest factor in the result was the stark difference between the two
halves of the Kings XI innings.
Coming into this game, Knight Riders were the most economical team in
the death overs in the IPL, giving away just 8.30 runs an over. In the
UAE leg, they were also the team that managed to stifle Kings XI
successfully. That control with the ball, especially in the latter half
of the innings, set up the game for the side. At 10 overs, Kings XI were
85 for 2, but they made only 64 for 6 in the next ten.
One of Knight Riders' chief contributors was Piyush Chawla,
who was brought back in place of Shakib Al Hasan. In UAE against Kings
XI, the legspinner had figures of 4-0-19-3 and he finished even this
game with the same numbers. Chawla struck immediately with the big
wicket of Glenn Maxwell, and then got rid of Sehwag and Rishi Dhawan in
the 15th and 17th overs. Chawla, along with Ryan ten Doeschate and Morne
Morkel, smothered any momentum Kings XI would have hoped to build.
Narine came on at the end and choked the run flow and even the normally
industrious Bailey found it difficult to push for boundaries. Between
the 15th and 20th overs, Kings XI - who average 50 runs in this period
of play - scored only three boundaries, and two of them were from
Mitchell Johnson.
Before the ten-over mark, though, the innings was all about Sehwag and
that was the most heartening sight for Kings XI. His studied nonchalance
of old was on display when he smacked the first ball of the match, off
Jacques Kallis, for four through the off side and then capitalised down
leg as the bowler tried to compensate. He got to 50 off 35 balls, but
like most Sehwag innings, the opposition also had their share of
chances. He was dropped in the second over and a few shots fell out of
reach of the fielders. Luckily for the Knight Riders, those mistakes
weren't too costly in the end.
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