Yuvraj leads Kings XI Punjab to a thrilling win over Mumbai
Kings reach semis as five run-outs cost Mumbai Indians what was a certain win! .
In the first match of the day, the Mumbai Indians took on the Kings XI Punjab. Last time these two teams met, S. Sreesanth was at the receiving end of a slap and Harbhajan was at the receiving end of a fine. Mumbai lost that match, then another, before making a u-turn to win six in a row. The Kings, on the other hand have been doing consistently well, and have won seven matches of the 10 they have played.
The Wankhede wicket usually supports spinners in the longer form of the game, but it has been a seamers' paradise in this tournament so far. The moisture and the late night dew have had something to do with this. This match was to be a day game, thus taking away the dew factor. The pitch also looked like a typical Wankhede wicket, and was expected to play a little slower, and turn a bit.
Despite this, and the fact that Sachin Tendulkar has played all his cricket here, he won the toss and decided to bowl first. Dwayne Bravo was back in the Caribbean and so was replaced by the other Dwayne - Dwayne Smith - who incidentally had scored a run-a-ball hundred on his Test debut. Mumbai also got in two virtually unheard quantities, Vikrant Yeligati and Siddharth Chitnis whereas the Kings brought in Tanmay Srivastava in place of portly off-spinner, Ramesh Powar. So, one team dropping a spinner, the other going in with a couple of them!
The man-in-form, Shaun Marsh, opened the Kings inning with James Hopes, and the Kings were jolted as early as the third ball of the inning by his namesake (Shaun Pollock) when Hopes was clueless about the one that pitched on the off-stump and drifted away. The edge went into the safe gloves of the new wicket keeper, Pinal Shah.
The new batsman was Luke Pomersbach, and the pair found it difficult to adjust to the pace of the wicket, Kings were 9/1 in 3 overs. Marsh was dropped by Robin Uthappa at short extra cover, and then Pomersbach hit a six and a four off Ashish Nehra to get the score moving to 30/1 in 5, Shaun Pollock having bowled three of his 4 overs.
Yeligati, the off-spinner came into bowl within the field restrictions and was thrashed for 13 and Chitnis went for nine. Marsh who struggled to come to grips with the pitch began to stroke the ball more freely, and pulled and cut Fernando for a couple of boundaries. Such was the intimidation of the partnership that five successive overs saw different bowlers bowling them, in the process getting Marsh to his 4th fifty of the tournament with Punjab reaching 84/1 in ten.
The Kings 100 came in the 12th over, as the heat began to take its toll on the Mumbai bowlers and the spinners began to leak even more on a pitch that was supposed to assist them. Surprisingly, Tendulkar did not change the bowlers around, and the two youngsters, Chitnis and Yeligati, each conceded 30 in their three overs, before Chitnis got rid of Marsh for a smashing 56-ball 81. The wicket did slow down the scoring, as the 16th over of the inning went for only five runs. This in turn frustrated the Kings further, and led to the downfall of Yuvraj Singh and Mahela Jayawardena, but Pomersbach was not done yet. He smashed 41 runs in the last three overs of the inning, in turn scoring an unbeaten 79, to lead his team's march to 189/4 in the 20. For some strange reason, Mumbai Indians' best bowler, Shaun Pollock, bowled only three overs, picking up a wicket for fourteen runs.
Source: http://www.dreamcricket.com
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Jimmy
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18:10:56
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