Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Aussie power keeps Delhi Capitals alive

The Marsh-Warner 144-run stand steers Delhi to an 8-wicket victory over Royals

- Rasesh Mandani rasesh.mandani@htlive.com

NAVI MUMBAI: The law of averages caught up with orange cap holder Jos Buttler, luck deserted purple cap holder Yuzvendra Chahal. As the two leading acts of Rajasthan Royals suffered on the same day, Delhi Capitals capitalise­d to register an eightwicke­t win at the DY Patil Stadium on Wednesday to keep their playoff hopes alive.

DC’s Mitchell Marsh dominated with bat and bowl— an innings of 89 (62b, 5x4, 7x6) to add to his spell of 3-025-2. On the scoreboard, the David Warner-Marsh secondwick­et partnershi­p of 144 in a run chase of 161 makes it appear straightfo­rward. But things were a lot trickier at the start of Delhi’s innings.

Trent Boult began brightly for RR, sending Srikar Bharat back second ball. He could have had Warner leg before early in the innings had he reviewed, but didn’t. The Kiwi left-armer was putting on a show of how it’s done with the new ball, hitting lengths and consistent­ly targetting the outside edge of Warner and Marsh. But importantl­y for Delhi, he kept missing the edges and the experience­d batters were happy to ride their luck.

In the ninth over, Chahal could have got Warner thrice, but he survived a dropped chance and even the bails remained stubborn, not falling, as he escaped being bowled.

Chahal kept up his efforts to deceive the batters in flight. Skipper Sanju Samson, seeing the match slip away, even brought Krishna back on to bowl the 13th over to break the Warner-Marsh stand, but found no success as the duo was determined to recreate their 2021 T20 World Cup final heroics.

Marsh remained on the offensive against the quicks, intermitte­ntly launching into sixes.

Warner, who had been playing second fiddle, cut loose after the second timeout.

Royals suffered an early blow while batting when Buttler, after scoring 30% of RR’s runs in the tournament, chipped a Chetan Sakariya half-volley straight to mid-on, on seven.

With Buttler gone and Shimron Hetmyer absent, RR promoted Ravichandr­an Ashwin to No 3. The move appeared more to lengthen the batting order than to push the scoring rate with a pinch-hitter.

The experience­d all-rounder played his role to perfection while the field was up, stealing three fours and a six through timing and placement to push RR’s powerplay returns to 43. Soon after, Ashwin found it difficult to hit out against Delhi’s spinners and Marsh’s pace-off deliveries and thoughts of retiring himself out would have crossed his mind.

This time he decided to stick it out and rediscover­ed his hitting range when he carted Kuldeep Yadav over the straight boundary in the 12th over. By the time Ashwin was out, at the start of the 15th over on 50 (38b, 4x4, 2x6), the RR change room was happy to welcome him back in the dugout.

Royals would have liked more runs in the death overs than the 44 they got in the final five. But Samson (6) lost his shape while trying to hit fast bowler Anrich Nortje out of the park, Riyan Parag (9) fell to a Sakariya’s back-of-the-hand slower ball and Shardul Thakur produced a mean five-run final over.

Brief scores: RR 160/6 (R Ashwin 50, D Padikkal 48; C Sakariya 2/23, M Marsh 2/25). DC 161/2 in 18.1 overs (M Marsh 89, D Warner 52*). DC won by 8 wkts.

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 ?? BCCI ?? Mitchell Marsh was adjudged Player of the Match after scoring 89 and taking 2/25 against Rajasthan Royals on Wednesday.
BCCI Mitchell Marsh was adjudged Player of the Match after scoring 89 and taking 2/25 against Rajasthan Royals on Wednesday.

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