Daredevils fall short despite Morkel fifty


Chennai Super Kings v Delhi Daredevils, IPL 2015, Chennai

csk vs dd

 

Chennai Super Kings won by 1 run
9 April 2015 – night match (20-over match)
Chennai Super Kings innings (20 overs maximum) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal DR Smith c Coulter-Nile b Imran Tahir 34 37 31 6 0 109.67
View dismissal BB McCullum c Yuvraj Singh b Coulter-Nile 4 6 2 1 0 200.00
View dismissal SK Raina b Coulter-Nile 4 12 7 0 0 57.14
View dismissal F du Plessis c Iyer b Duminy 32 34 24 3 0 133.33
View dismissal RA Jadeja st †Gautam b Mishra 17 29 18 1 1 94.44
View dismissal MS Dhoni*† c Agarwal b Coulter-Nile 30 35 27 1 2 111.11
View dismissal DJ Bravo lbw b Muthuswami 1 7 3 0 0 33.33
R Ashwin not out 12 16 8 1 0 150.00
MM Sharma not out 2 1 1 0 0 200.00
Extras (b 1, lb 10, w 2, nb 1) 14
Total (7 wickets; 20 overs) 150 (7.50 runs per over)
Bowling O M R W Econ 0s 4s 6s
JA Morkel 3 0 28 0 9.33 7 5 0 (1w)
View wickets NM Coulter-Nile 4 0 30 3 7.50 14 2 2 (1nb)
View wicket DJ Muthuswami 3 0 18 1 6.00 10 3 0
View wicket Imran Tahir 4 0 27 1 6.75 8 2 0
View wicket A Mishra 4 0 21 1 5.25 10 0 1
View wicket JP Duminy 2 0 15 1 7.50 4 1 0 (1w)
Delhi Daredevils innings (target: 151 runs from 20 overs) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal MA Agarwal c †Dhoni b Nehra 15 14 12 2 1 125.00
View dismissal CM Gautam c Bravo b Nehra 4 11 5 0 0 80.00
JA Morkel not out 73 99 55 8 1 132.72
View dismissal SS Iyer c du Plessis b Nehra 7 11 7 1 0 100.00
View dismissal KM Jadhav c Jadeja b Sharma 20 38 20 2 0 100.00
View dismissal Yuvraj Singh c Pandey b Bravo 9 8 6 1 0 150.00
View dismissal JP Duminy* b Pandey 5 5 5 0 0 100.00
View dismissal NM Coulter-Nile b Ashwin 5 12 4 1 0 125.00
View dismissal A Mishra run out (†Dhoni/Nehra) 4 6 4 0 0 100.00
View dismissal Imran Tahir c Raina b Bravo 2 5 2 0 0 100.00
DJ Muthuswami not out 0 4 0 0 0
Extras (w 5) 5
Total (9 wickets; 20 overs) 149 (7.45 runs per over)
Bowling O M R W Econ 0s 4s 6s
View wickets A Nehra 4 0 25 3 6.25 12 3 0 (1w)
View wicket MM Sharma 4 0 33 1 8.25 8 3 1 (1w)
View wicket IC Pandey 4 0 30 1 7.50 9 4 0
View wicket R Ashwin 4 0 25 1 6.25 8 2 0 (1w)
View wickets DJ Bravo 4 0 36 2 9.00 6 3 1 (2w)

MATCH DETAILS


Toss – Delhi Daredevils, who chose to field
Points – Chennai Super Kings 2, Delhi Daredevils 0
Player of the match – A Nehra (Chennai Super Kings)

Chennai Super Kings’ best discipline backfired. Their famed blueprint – keeping wickets in hand to tuck into the final five overs – was foiled. With only 151 to get, Delhi Daredevils had the opportunity to fell a six-match losing streak to MS Dhoni’s men. But when aggression was required, they hid their best batsmen in the lower middle order. Those efforts to prevent the worst possible outcome only hastened its arrival as Daredevils lost by one run.

Albie Morkel was the only threat. He filled every Super Kings fan with a heady cocktail of dread and déjà vu. They have spent six years whistling for him. He was the source of probably theirmost famous win in IPL history. His allegiances are with Daredevils this season and struck an unbeaten 73 off 55 that indicated he could be more than just a handy source of nitrous when the finish line nears. Ironically again, as well as he gave the Daredevils chase the spine it needed, his finishing skills came up short. They needed six off the last ball. Morkel’s belt reached the cover boundary after an agonising bounce.

He had seen Ashish Nehra wreck the top order – one made up of Shreyas Iyer, who was making his IPL debut, Mayank Agarwal, who biffs but never persists and CM Gautam, who averages 18 and strikes at 108. Nehra sent each one off with a kiss, and might as well have added another to one to the Daredevils thinktank.

Despite those setbacks, 49 off 30 balls was doable and Morkel had hung on. Another reason for the Chennai fans to worry. That’s usually how Super Kings win their games. The only difference though is they try not to lose batsmen of the calibre of Yuvraj Singh and JP Duminy in the space of seven balls. Coming back from that eventually ended up being too much.

It undid a good night for the Daredevils bowlers. Super Kings had been 100 for 3 in the 13th over, with Dhoni lying in wait against a side spring cleaned of their identity. The final flourish seemed academic, except it never came. Dhoni made only 30 off 27; his team made only 39 off the last five. They did have 150 on the board though, and the force of an MA Chidambaram crowd that hadn’t seen their IPL side play for nearly two years.

The only reason Daredevils came within one shot of victory was Morkel deviating from their safety-first mindset. The decision to bowl was a clear indication. They were without Angelo Mathews, a forced absence, Zaheer Khan, for whom they shelled Rs 4 crores and Mohammed Shami, India’s top wicket-taker at the World Cup.

So, the gentle seam-up from Morkel kickstarted their season, there was a dropped catch in the second over and little-known Domnic Joseph was given the third. Despite sustaining two early wickets, Super Kings had somehow raced to 59 at the end of the mandatory Powerplay. Cinderella wouldn’t have felt as jittery with one minute left to midnight.

But Nathan Coulter-Nile was Daredevils’ fairy godmother. He harnessed the pace and bounce from the pitch to pack 14 dot balls and the invaluable wickets of Brendon McCullum and Raina in his four overs. Daredevils needed his spell to calm them, and their two legspinners plotted a course reversal. Imran Tahir, who would sooner bowl left-handed than play defensively, and Amit Mishra, the most productive spinner in seven years of IPL, tossed the ball up and turned it the wrong way enough times to leave the batsmen uncertain. The three of them grabbed five wickets for 78 in 12 overs by taking the opposition head on. But the batsmen didn’t follow that example.

IPL hopes to cure World Cup hangover


Within ten days after the World Cup final, the IPL is here. But one factor that will draw Indian crowds in is that after Australia and New Zealand, cricket is now closer to the fans.

Pepsi IPL 2015 - Opening Night

The IPL might start on a muted note but the volume is only going to get louder by the day © BCCI

Kolkata is under the spell of Kalboishaskhi jhor (thunder showers). But within 24 hours from now this grey, besieged city will erupt in joyful technicolour as the eighth season of IPL starts at Eden Gardens with defending champions Kolkata Knight Riders playing Mumbai Indians. Seventy-thousand fans are likely to fill the majestic ground not just to watch the cricket, but also to sing and dance at a party to be hosted by Knight Riders owner and in-house DJ Shah Rukh Khan.

But in contrast to the past, the hype this time has been restrained, eclipsed by the build-up for the elections for the Kolkata Municipal Corporation, which take place next week. Take a walk or a drive across Kolkata and you will see more faces of local politicians staring and reaching out from cut-outs hanging across the city than cricketers. Add to the fact that the IPL is being played so close to the World Cup and it might be heading to a damp squib. But IPL has faced bigger challenges before.

One factor that will draw crowds in is cricket is now close to the fans. The World Cup was played far away in Australia and New Zealand. A lot of those match-winners are now in the IPL. It would be a great opportunity to watch the heroes in person.

But it is the stories and feats that will build the excitement. Will there be an almost famous story that Sanjay Bangar’s Kings XI Punjab scripted by finishing runners-up last season? Riveting moments like Corey Anderson smashing Rajasthan Royals’ fast bowlers to capture an insurmountable asking rate which forced the usually stoic Rahul Dravid to throw his cap in disgust as Mumbai Indians made the playoffs.

The new season has its own attractions: Ricky Ponting enters the coaching arena for the first time as the head coach of Mumbai Indians. Would his team be the no-holds-barred outfits he led wearing the baggy green? Can Virat Kohli, back after a dominant season in the Test series in Australia in his first stint as India’s captain, finally inspire Royal Challengers Bangalore to their first IPL title? How many and what kind of records can Chris Gayle, AB de Villiers, Glenn Maxwell, Brendon McCullum break in a tournament that favours batting?

Theatre is a huge part of IPL’s fabric. One of the most controversial moments of IPL history was witnessed when a verbal tussle between Royal Challengers’ Mitchell Starc and Mumbai’s Kieron Pollard virtually came close to physical blows. Starc threw the ball at Pollard who responded by flinging the bat in the direction of his opponent.

Even at the World Cup, sledging was one of the biggest talking points and the IPL is bound to witness more. As reported last week players want to sort the issue among themselves as far as possible without being suffocated by the match officials.

But would the new BCCI administration allow such leniency? Jagmohan Dalmiya, the BCCI president, even when he was the interim BCCI chief two years back when the corruption scandal broke, has always favoured austerity. In his second stint as the BCCI head, Dalmiya wants to get the focus back on cricket.

His administration reportedly did not want to spend too much on hiring very expensive A-list entertainers for the opening ceremony and instead set a restricted budget for the occasion. Probably Dalmiya understands the real entertainment remains in the tournament. It is a place where both cricket and Bollywood come together.

Even the skeptic taxi driver is getting curious. He wants to know the big buys of this year’s auction. Who bought and dropped whom? How many matches are Kolkata playing at home in April?

Despite the weariness, the cart puller, the taxiwallah, the man on the street knows the IPL is here. The skies are clear. They know their team is the defending champion. Soon the addas andkattas and local trains will be raging with debates about matches from around the country. The IPL might start on a muted note but the volume is only going to get louder by the day.