Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

KKR aim to end lopsided run vs Mumbai Indians

- Dhiman Sarkar sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com ■ ■

KOLKATA: If T20 is cricket in shorthand and the gap between the good and the not-so-good is closer than in other formats, history between teams shouldn’t really matter. And be it in T20s or IPL, it usually doesn’t.

Except when Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) meet Mumbai Indians (MI). They have five IPL titles between them but going into Wednesday’s match here the defending champions lead the head-to-head 14-6. The record for the last seven games is 7-0 in favour of MI.

“Football is a simple game. Twenty-two men chase a ball for 90 minutes and at the end, the Germans always win,” former England skipper Gary Lineker once said. Import that comment into IPL and you could get KKR’S lopsided record against MI. Teams have changed, captains

and coaches have come and gone but MI always seem to hit a purple patch against the men in purple. When the opposite happened, in 2012, it got Shah Rukh Khan into trouble at Wankhede. Even at the Eden, MI have an enviable record. They have won two IPL titles here, and of the eight league games, MI have won six. That KKR haven’t beaten MI at home since 2015 tells its story. It makes KKR doing the double over MI in 2014 seem as much an exception as Nitish Rana dismissing Virat Kohli and AB de Villiers off successive deliveries. All this fits nicely for habitual late starters MI. It seemed unlikely when Robin Uthappa and Rana were batting on Sunday but the Pandya brothers, Krunal and Hardik, ensured that normal service continued.

“We have got a bit of jinx going on here. The win-loss record isn’t great but it is hard to say why,” said KKR opener Chris Lynn. “We are going to try and get one back tomorrow night. We definitely owe them one. We could have won the game the other night but we let that one slip.”

 ?? AFP ?? Kolkata Knight Riders opener Chris Lynn.
AFP Kolkata Knight Riders opener Chris Lynn.
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