The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Rashid leads a heist for Titans as Royals throw away a comfortabl­e win

- NAMIT KUMAR

Rajasthan Royals prey on Gujarat Titans' mistakes to stay ahead for most of the night, only to throw away an easy victory with poor bowling at the death to slump to their first defeat of the season.

How to throw away a win

If anyone is looking for a tutorial on how to throw away a victory, look no further than the death bowling of Kuldeep Sen and Avesh Khan, who combined to allow Gujarat Titans back into a game they had all but lost. Rashid Khan and Rahul Tewatia were able to slog through poor bowling and ride the good fortune of plenty of extras in the final overs to give their side a three-wicket win over Rajasthan Royals on Wednesday.

Rashid was sensationa­l in the end, finishing on 24 off 11 balls, and offering up another reminder that, on his day, he is a proper T20 allrounder.

But Gujarat Titans needed 60 from 25 balls with each of their set batsmen gone. Despite a big over off R Ashwin, they still needed 35 from the last two overs and 28 from the final nine deliveries. Winning from that position had less to do with the pinchhitti­ng and/or finishing abilities of Rashid and Tewatia, and more about some dreadful bowling.

Sen gave his side the major breakthrou­gh on the day, with a double-wicket over in the 11th, but after bowling a 20-run penultimat­e over that had two wides, a no ball, and two rank full tosses, he undid all that work. Avesh would lend a helping hand, misreading the fields set by his team despite frantic discussion­s before every ball, and allowing three easy boundaries.

Skipper Sanju Samson looked in disbelief, fuming at the end, perhaps not in recognitio­n of his own perplexing calls - allowing the likes of Ashwin to bowl at the death when Trent Boult had only bowled two overs, especially with so many runs to defend and the team increasing­ly under pressure.

Rajasthan, in essence, threw away a game they dominated for the most part for a first defeat this season.

Gill takes it deep

Before the final two overs of the second innings, Rajasthan were in complete control. After a frustratin­g first innings, Gill presumably came into the middle with a plan to pace his innings well and take the run chase as deep as he could. By the end of the 11th over, coming directly after a short rain break, it seemed like he was fighting a lone battle.

Sen, the Madhya Pradesh-born Tamil

Nadu pacer, tore through six balls at 140kmph+ to scalp both Wade and Abhinav Manohar. He was ably supported by his side's spinners on either side of his double-wicket over. In the middle overs, R Ashwin and Keshav Maharaj would choke Gujarat for runs, while Chahal found the wickets.

Even as Gill attempted to salvage things for his side with a late flourish, clearly targetting Chahal, the experience­d leggie would bait him with a wide leg-break that allowed Samson to complete a routine stumping. Gill fell for a well-made 44-ball 72, an innings that proved to be the catalyst for an unlikely win.

Starting troubles

Despite a good start to the season, RR haven't had good opening stands.

Ahead of their match on Wednesday, the table-toppers had an average run rate of 7.70 in the first six overs. Those problems surfaced again, as they crawled to 43-2 at 7.16 in the first six. Having middled a few, some straight to the fielders on the off side, there were indication­s that this might be Yashaswi Jaiswal's day after average performanc­es this season. But scoreboard pressure eventually caught up to him as he nicked one to Matthew Wade attempting a pre-meditated scoop to a back-oflength ball from Umesh Yadav

Jos Buttler failed to make much of an impact either. He departed after his chief tormentor Rashid Khan came into the attack in the sixth over. In nine IPL innings against Rashid, the England captain has managed just 30 runs without a single boundary and has lost his wicket four times. Here too, Rashid set him up perfectly as Buttler edged to slip.

Parag-samson show

RR got going when Sanju Samson and Riyan Parag replaced the Rajasthan Royals openers after the powerplay. Even as Gujarat Giants skipper Shubman Gill attempted to choke the hosts through his rotation of spinners, both were able to survive the good balls and more importantl­y, punish the bad ones, anchoring their side with a 130-run partnershi­p.

Parag once again delivered. Noor Ahmad misses his line from around the wicket? Smashed for two sixes in an over. Mohit Sharma leaves his attempted wide yorkers too short? Muscled over the leg side.

Arriving at the crease under pressure, even as Samson seemed keen to simply keep rotating strike, Parag rode his luck after keeper Matthew Wade dropped him twice behind the stumps, and counteratt­acked to find boundaries. It spurred Samson, who went from 29 from 20 to an unbeaten 68 from 38. RR finished strong to get to a total that, if not for a freak breakdown in the end, they should have defended comfortabl­y.

Rajasthan Royals 196 for 3 (Samson 68, Parag 76, Rashid 1-18) lost to Gujarat Titans 199 for 7 (Gill 72, Rashid 24*, Tewatia, 22, Kuldeep 3-41) by three wickets

 ?? Sportzpics ?? Rashid Khan produced an all-round performanc­e with figures of 1/18 with the ball before returning to hit a match-winning 24 off 11.
Sportzpics Rashid Khan produced an all-round performanc­e with figures of 1/18 with the ball before returning to hit a match-winning 24 off 11.

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