Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Pollard cameo helps Mumbai prevail despite Rahul heroics

KXIP opener takes fight to opposition with classic shots but hosts MI win to stay alive

-

Delhi Daredevils while Punjab face in-form Chennai Super Kings. In a sparkling knock of 94 (60 balls), Rahul had threatened to take the game away from the hosts while chasing 187 for win.

While his teammates were getting hammered, pace ace Bumrah gave nothing away, refusing to be cowed down by Rahul’s onslaught. The pacer brought the house down on the third ball off the 19th over by claiming the allimporta­nt wicket of Rahul while conceding just six runs. With 17 runs needed off six balls, Mitchell Mcclenagha­n did well to defend.

The target was stiff but Kings XI Punjab showed no signs of panic. Displaying ice-cool nerves, KL Rahul was holding centrestag­e. At the end of the 15th over, Kings XI were 127 for one, the equation reading 60 off 30 balls. Mumbai Indians’ young leg-spinner Mayank Markande added to the pressure by bowling four tight balls. However, Rahul smashed two massive sixes off the last two balls to make 42 off 24 balls. With nine wickets in hand and Aaron Finch also set, Kings XI had the edge.

Cheered on by a vociferous home crowd, Bumrah stepped up to the occasion and struck the first ball of the next over to send back Finch, who shared an 111run partnershi­p with Rahul. Four balls later, Bumrah struck again to send back Marcus Stoinis.

With 36 needed off 16 balls, the pendulum had swung. Rahul’s response: he played a ferocious hook shot off Ben Cutting and then smashed back to back fours with reverse hits, to make it 24 off 13 balls. However, Bumrah had the last laugh, not conceding a single boundary.

The chase was thrilling to watch. It was not just the runs, Rahul oozed class in a fine exhibition of strokeplay, playing around with the field more than using raw power. 57 runs were scored in the powerplay overs by Kings XI to ensure they kept up with the MI innings, who had been 60 for three at that mark.

After 10 overs, Kings XI were cruising on 86 for one.

At the other end, Aaron Finch was also playing solidly. The big shots had been played against the pacers, and when Mumbai Indians introduced their spinners, the two consolidat­ed with riskfree batting.

In bowling, Andrew Tye was the star performer for Kings XI, finishing with figures of 4-0-16-4, his third four-wicket haul in this IPL. But, despite an inspired effort from the pacer, MI did well to reach a total of 186 for eight.

For Mumbai Indians, Kieron Pollard finally came good, keeping them in the game with a 23-ball 50 (5 fours, three sixes). I ran into John Wright, former New Zealand captain and India coach, at a get together in Mumbai recently and asked him what he thought of the 100-ball-a-side league mooted by the England Cricket Board, which has intrigued and confounded aficionado­s.

“The English were entering the T20 league universe and had to do something distinct to be in this race too!,” said Wright wryly about the need to shorten an already seriously abridged format. But I also sensed a hint of helplessne­ss in him at the way cricket is headed.

For latecomers to the unfolding 100-ball story, this is the ECB’S effort to play catch up with the IPL, Big Bash, Caribbean Premier League and sundry other T20 tournament­s that have proliferat­ed all over the world in the past decade.

The 100-ball format entails each side playing 15 overs, with the final over being of 10 balls. Not just that, an innovation being discussed is that for this 10-ball over, the captain could use three bowlers if he so desires!

This is radical. While cricket has had eight-ball overs in the past, multiple bowlers being used – outside of injury in the course of an over – is unheard of. What’s the deal?

Indeed, why tinker with the T20 format when it has proved so successful? And where such experiment­ation will end is anybody’s guess. How far are we from a 10-overs-a-side league? Or just a ‘Super Over’, winner takes all slugfest?

A MASSIVE THREAT

The mind boggles and the heart sinks. This is not good news for lovers and and romantics of the five-day format. The primacy of Test cricket, which is what held up the sport for more than 125 years, has never been under greater threat.

ECB chairman Colin Graves, expounding the need for 100-ball cricket said last week, “the younger generation is just not attracted to cricket. In all the work, surveys and research we have done, they want something different...” The import of this can’t be lost on anybody.

Ironically, Graves’s statement came in the same week that Ireland played their first-ever Test, against Pakistan. And did a mighty good job of it too, winning hearts and admiration even if they failed to win the match.

Whether sunrise for Ireland cricket has come when the sun is setting on the five-day format is a cruel paradox that affects all Test countries, players and fans, not just the newbies.

(Afghanista­n, incidental­ly, play their first Test against India in mid-june).

So, can anything be done to salvage the situation?

Perhaps yes, if there is will power and concerted effort. While several players from different countries see T20 leagues as their future, a vast majority – and from the more influentia­l Boards – still maintain that Test cricket is the apex of their careers.

NEED INDIA’S SUPPORT

But they need to do more to give this succour. While Virat Kohli opting for county experience to enhance his performanc­e in Tests is laudable,

I wish he would also use his clout to convince the BCCI why its is important for the future of the five-day format that India plays day-night Tests too.

There is dire need of thought leadership from the playing fraternity to save Test cricket. This needs to come from those recently retired or playing currently because they are more in tune with trends in cricket, society and player psychology.

At the Ht-mintasia Leadership Summit in Singapore last month I moderated a session with Sachin Tendulkar where he spoke of making Test cricket more interestin­g for spectators by having different balls from both ends, a la ODIS.

Whether this will work or something else is open to debate. But it could be a good starting point for a White Paper on how to save Test cricket, put together by the likes of, say, Tendulkar, Sangakarra, Ponting, Kohli, Williamson, Root etc.

A lost cause is only is one given up without a fight!

IT WAS NOT JUST THE RUNS. RAHUL OOZED CLASS IN AN EXHIBITION OF STROKEPLAY, PLAYING AROUND WITH THE FIELD MORE THAN USING RAW POWER

 ?? BCCI PHOTO ?? Kieron Pollard of Mumbai Indians scored his first fifty of this IPL season.
BCCI PHOTO Kieron Pollard of Mumbai Indians scored his first fifty of this IPL season.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India