Rajasthan Royals 170 for 6 (Nair 44, Narine 2-28) beat Kolkata Knight Riders 160 for 6 (Uthappa 65, Gambhir 54, Watson 3-21, Tambe 3-26) by 10 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
An equation of 50 from the final six overs is not cause for alarm and
Knight Riders had all 10 wickets in hand, but the events that unfolded
at Motera were almost unfathomable. Shane Watson
pried out Gambhir to tip the dominoes. An inexplicable promotion for
Andre Russell did not last long and before the over ended three wickets
were down. Pravin Tambe
claimed a hat-trick off the first three balls of the next over to
complete the worst collapse for the first six wickets in T20 history.
Before those nightmarish few minutes, Uthappa had cemented the team's
belief in him by melding stability and enterprise together. His fluency
allowed Gambhir to work himself into form. Both batsmen embraced
percentage cricket, concentrating on keeping a straight face coming down
on the ball. Uthappa used his feet to bolster his hits through and over
mid-on while Gambhir peppered the cover boundary. It wasn't the most
eye-catching innings but it was what Knight Riders needed from their
captain and victory seemed more probable than the eventual outcome.
Suryakumar Yadav and Shakib Al Hasan were suddenly faced with a required
rate over 11 in the final four overs. They swung and swiped and even
enjoyed a couple of free hits but they could not muster the necessary
pace. Having drained the wind from Knight Riders' sails, Watson returned
to bowl an intelligent final over to finish things off. This is the
second time a week that Royals have stolen a match from under Knight
Riders' noses. Gambhir's men couldn't overhaul an equation of 16 of 12
and lost after the match was pushed into a Super Over.
After Royals were sent in, Karun Nair and Ajinkya Rahane found little
trouble dealing with the early overs. The pitch was marked with patches
of grass but no matter how much the KKR bowlers willed it, their search
for movement was in vain. A few easy flicks to the square boundary on
the leg side kickstarted their half-century partnership that was
eventually undone by a run out. Nair's season had begun with two
single-figure scores and he had to overcome a sluggish beginning during
his half-century against Delhi Daredevils. But once he did, he showcased
some effective shots and today he seemed to pick up where he had left
off. A second successive fifty wasn't on the cards, though.
Sanju Samson, at No.3, ensured there was no loss in momentum with some
smart shots to drive Royals past their hundred. Watson's proclivity to
hit straight down the ground hinted at a big total on the horizon.
Knight Riders pulled things back in the last four overs but the 35 runs
that the home side managed during that period proved more than enough.
Alagappan Muthu is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
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