Rising Pune Supergiant 157 for 3 (Smith 45, Tiwary 44*) beat Royal Challengers Bangalore 96 for 9 (Kohli 55, Ferguson 2-7) by 61 runs
 |
| Hogg: RCB batting too reliant on big names |
Utterly wasteful batting left Royal Challengers Bangalore closer to the
brink than ever before in IPL 2017. They needed 158 to win the first of
five games Virat Kohli said they had to win to make the play-offs. They
did not need a scoreline that read 53 for 5 in the 10th over. But that
is what they got. That, and a chastening, morale-killing 61-run defeat.
Rising Pune Supergiant were not complaining. They finally got to defend a
total at home and safeguard their position at fourth place on the
points table.
So what now for RCB? They can, mathematically,
still make the final four, but can a team that fell to 49 all out, a
team that will lose AB de Villiers in the coming weeks, a team that tops
the charts in run-outs (7), single-digit scores (40) and scoring slowly
in the Powerplay (6.64) stop the rot in time?
The hitter
Rahul Tripathi has shouldered considerable responsibility in his first
IPL season. He is expected to take advantage of fielding restrictions in
the Powerplay, which by itself is not an unreasonable demand. But the
26-year old has also had to make up for his partner's struggles. Ajinkya
Rahane's strike-rate of 123 is the lowest among openers with 100 or
more runs in this IPL and today he fell early as well, sweeping a full
toss to short fine leg.
RCB might have thought that gave them the advantage. After all, Tripathi
did not even play the 2017 domestic T20 tournament. But on a grander
stage, against tougher bowlers, he has now smashed six straight 30-plus
scores - an unmatched tally - and specifically in the first six overs,
he has 198 runs - another unmatched tally - hitting a boundary every
3.71 balls.
A see-saw innings
Pune collected 43 runs in the Powerplay, but only 26 in the next five
overs, hitting only one four. This was because they had to deal with a
dry pitch and a set of RCB players swearing by their slower balls.
Another thing that worked for Kohli was his use of Pawan Negi. The
left-arm spinner has bowled 120 balls this season - 103 of them have
been to right-handers. They have also contributed to seven of his eight
wickets, Tripathi the latest to succumb for 37 off 28 balls. Negi
finished with 1 for 18, equalling his most economical spell of four
overs in IPL history.
0 comments:
Post a Comment