DELHI MAY BE DOWN, BUT ONE PLAYER IS ON THE UP
Nepal’s Lamichhane continues to impress in IPL, while Bangalore lose to Rajasthan, writes Paul Radley
Although the victory was ultimately in vain, Sandeep Lamichhane enhanced his burgeoning reputation by playing a key role as last-placed Delhi Daredevils thrashed title-chasing Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League (IPL).
The 17-year-old leg-spinner is the first Nepal cricketer to play in the IPL.
Playing just his second match of the competition, he took 1-21 from his four overs, as Delhi claimed a 34-run win at Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium on Friday night.
Although the win meant nothing as per the points table – Delhi remained bottom, while CSK are already assured a playoff place – it did provide further evidence of Lamichhane’s rich promise.
His wicket was the prized one of Suresh Raina, the India batsman who has scored more runs than anyone in IPL history apart from Virat Kohli.
Just as he had done on debut against Royal Challengers Bangalore earlier in the week, the teenage spinner proved to be up for the challenge against some of the biggest names in the sport.
Kohli and AB de Villiers had only managed two boundaries between them off his bowling against RCB. And Lamichhane’s miserly return against CSK was in spite of the fact he was bowling against Raina, MS Dhoni and Ravindra Jadeja for most of his four overs.
“They were well set at that moment and I was just trying to bowl my best ball,” Lamichhane said of his dismissal of Raina, in a post-match television interview.
“On that occasion we got the wicket, and suddenly the game was changed from there.”
Lamichhane has enjoyed a meteoric rise so far in 2018. He was player of the tournament at the World Cricket League Division 2 in Namibia in February, a competition won by UAE.
That was his first competitive cricket after finding out – while on a preparatory tour in Dubai – he had been selected to play in the IPL.
He then played a lead part as Nepal clinched one-day international status for the first time, at the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe.
And between playing his first and second matches at the IPL he was announced as part of the IPL World XI squad for a charity match against West Indies, which will be played at Lord’s at the end of this month.
“I am enjoying [the experience] and would like to say thank you to each and every supporter, from back home in Nepal as well,” he said.
“They are supporting me and enjoying this IPL as well. Thanks to IPL for giving me this kind of exposure, and DD as well.”
Shreyas Iyer, the Delhi captain, said his side had been “craving” a win, which was just their fourth from the 13 matches they have played.
“With regards to preparation we have not been lacking since the start of the IPL,” Iyer said.
“We were up to the mark, it is just we weren’t able to execute what we were planning in the net sessions.
“All three departments weren’t clicking together. In the matches we have won, all three have clicked together.”
In yesterday’s early IPL match, Rajasthan Royals kept their play-off hopes alive with a 30-run victory over Royal Challengers Bangalore.
Bengaluru-born leg-spinner Shreyas Gopal did most of the damage on his hometown side, finishing with with career-best figures of 4-16. Rajasthan had earlier posted 164-5 largely off Rahul Tripathi’s unbeaten knock of 80 off 58 balls.
Virat Kohli’s side suffered a spectacular middle-order collapse in return. A 55-run second-wicket partnership, between Parthiv Patel and AB de Villiers, followed Kohli’s dismissal, and put RCB in a strong
position at 75-1 in the ninth over. But Shreyas ran through the middle order and the rest simply crumbled, the last nine wickets falling for only 59 runs.
“It was a strange one, great position at one stage but the way we fumbled it wasn’t ideal,” Kolhi said.
“AB was batting beautifully, the decision-making of the others was poor. It shouldn’t have been repeated by five-six guys in a row ... Disappointed to not finish this off after we were cruising, just to see the way it unfolded after that hurts.”