Khaleej Times

Three cheers for host UAE as IPL beats Covid fears to reach finale

- Rituraj Borkakoty rituraj@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — Mumbai Indians ns and Delhi Capitals are the last two teams standing after 52 match days and nd 59 games of fluctuatin­g fortunes.

And these two teams will be fighting one last battle to determine mine the winner of the 2020 Indian Premier ier League at the magnificen­t Dubai Internatio­nal nternation­al Cricket Stadium at 6pm today.

The Mumbai Indians are the overwhelmi­ng favourites to add to their four trophies in the world’s orld’s richest T20 tournament.

But the Delhi Capitals s have what it takes to give the Rohit Sharma-led Mumbai team a run for their heir money.

Ricky Ponting, the Delhi elhi Capitals head coach, hope hopes his team will produce their best fo form against the strong Mumbai team in the title-decider. “The boys have ha managed to play two really good g games out of their last three, and hopef hopefully we can play our best game in the final,” Ponting said. It remains to be seen if Ponting’s team become th the newest winners of the cash-rich league. l

But what is beyond doubt is the UAE’s position p among the world’s grea greatest sporting destinatio­ns, having hav now hosted the premier tour tournament amid a raging pandemic. pandemi

The remarkable manner in which the Delhi Capitals regrouped to beat Sunrisers Hyderabad has added a zing to tonight’s final. It’s been a thrilling IPL 2020, full of upsets and upheavals, and of the more dramatic stories has been the Delhi Capitals maiden entry into the final.

While the four-time title winners and defending champions Mumbai Indians have been consistent­ly strong in reaching this stage, Delhi Capitals have had a fairly tortuous route.

For the first three-four weeks of the tournament, both these teams looked evenly matched in talent and were going neck and neck in securing point. That they should meet in the final seemed a logical prediction to make.

Delhi then hit a massive slump thereafter, and while they finished no. 2 on the points table, looked a team terribly short on confidence, losing five matches out of six heading into Sunday’s do-or-die clash against the Sunrisers Hyderabad.

The David Warner-led Sunrisers Hyderabad were the more favoured side in this clash for the aggressive manner in which they reached the playoffs and then beat the Royal Challenger­s Bangalore in a cliffhange­r. They had the momentum and in-form players but came unstuck against a revitalise­d Delhi side. The gamble to open with Marcus Stoinis paid off handsomely and Delhi Capitals never looked back. A strong batting performanc­e was followed by incisive bowling from Kagiso Rabada, with Stoinis impressing in this department too.

There are strong similariti­es between Delhi Capitals and Mumbai Indians — hefty batting line-up, versatile bowling attack with class pace and spin bowlers — which promise a tight contest tonight if both teams play to potential.

Mumbai have been like a juggernaut, marching into the final with big victories. The bating runs deep, and there is not a single batsman out of form, though captain Rohit Sharma hasn’t scored too many after returning from injury. In the bowling, Jasprit Bumrah and Trent Boult have been exceptiona­l, with splendid support from Nathan Coulter-Nile, Krunal Pandya and Rahul Chahar. Mumbai’s fielding has been consistent­ly brilliant too.

Going by track record, Mumbai appear overwhelmi­ng favourites, having beaten Delhi Capitals all three times they’ve met this season. In fact the last time the teams met, DC were at one stage reduced to 0-3, recovering to score more than 100 but losing badly nonetheles­s.

That’s in the past though. On Sunday’s showing, Delhi Capitals ambition has been reignited. Never having reached an IPL final, they’d want to clinch their maiden title.

It won’t be easy against the mighty Mumbai, but it’s not impossible either if they show the same chutzpah and commitment as they did on Sunday night against Sunrisers.

Interestin­gly, every leap year, the IPL has had a new champion: Kolkata Knight Riders in 2012, Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2016.

Also, Mumbai have never won twice in succession. We’ll know by Tuesday night if these factoids remain relevant or not.

There will be a lilittle bit of psychologi­cal aadvantage. Yes, but what we havhave seen with IPL is that every day is a fresh day and every gameg is a new game Rohit Sharma, MI captain

(It’s) best feeling ever. Journey has been a roller-coaster. Hoping that in the next game as well, against MI the biggest team, we’re able to play freely Shreyas iyer, DC captain

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates