The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Fraser-mcgurk double barrel

Kuldeep bowls dreamy spell before the Aussie sets up a confident chase for DC

- SANDIP G

Unknown Aussie

Only the stats nerd would instantly recognise Jake Fraser-mcgurk. The 22-year-old became the fastest century maker in List A cricket last year when he reached the threefigur­e mark in merely 29 balls, for South Australia against Tasmania, in a futile chase of 436. However, IPL is a quicksand that has drowned several record-setting overseas batsmen.

Fraser-mcgurk, though, made an emphatic impression on his debut, rattling off 55 power-drilled runs in 35 balls, pursuing 168 for Delhi's second win of the season. If handing him the cap was a surprise, shocking was to see him walk in after the fall of David Warner, his idol. There is a bit of Warner in him, in the shuddering power he generates from his enormous bat-swing and forearms, and the attacking spirit. He counterpun­ched straightaw­ay, heaving the second ball he faced, off Yash Thakur, for a six over deep mid-wicket. He raced away to 16 off seven balls, a brutal maximum off Arshad Khan setting him off to a flier.

After the storm came the lull. In hindsight, this was his nervous teething phase in the league. A combinatio­n of slow pitch and clever bowling reduced his stroll into a stagger. Slower balls and cutters are not his best friends. He enjoyed a slice of fortune too— beginner’s luck if you can call it—when the usually splendid Ravi Bishnoi shelled a sitter at cover on 25. Two balls later, upon the reintroduc­tion of Krunal Pandya, he creamed three successive sixes, each a shot of coldeyed violence.

The onslaught came just after Rishabh Pant’s blaze of boundaries, wherein the Capitals’ captain had plundered 19 off seven balls, reversing the momentum Super Giants were gathering. Fraser-mcgurk—the rare double-barreled name will take some getting used to—would then effectivel­y kill the game. The 21-run over effectivel­y sealed the game’s destiny, before he and Pant combined for another 15-run over. Though both did not survive long enough to hit the winning runs, their 77-run associatio­n had put Delhi on an unstoppabl­e course.

This was a game where everything aligned for Delhi, from the promising debut of Fraser-mcgurk to the form of Prithvi Shaw, whose scything 32 off 22 balls tone-set Capitals’ pursuit of 168. The prime architect of the game, though, was Kuldeep Yadav, returning from a brief hiatus, and resuming his renaissanc­e act.

Magical Kuldeep

The googly that slithered through the gate of Nicholas Pooran, reducing him to a baffled imposter, would enter IPL immortalit­y; the Marcus Stoinis googly was a piece of shrewd perfection; but the ball that really told the genius lurking beneath the mop of unkempt curls, was the slider that nailed KL Rahul, the Super Giants talisman, batting with smooth conviction.

To consume Rahul when playing the cut takes some expertise. Rahul has quick hands, that delectably deflects the ball to the fence. It is as though he has trained every cell of his to perfect the stroke. Few unlock the cut variants as emphatical­ly as he does. So when Kuldeep dropped the length a bit (he is now a master of shuffling lengths and changing speed without any alteration­s to his run-up or action), fed it wide, almost like a bait, Rahul couldn’t resist his impulses. There was no reason why he should have.

But this one was brisker—clocked 89 kph, whereas the average speed was around 84-85 kph, kept a bit low, slid away with the angle, and grazed the bottom of his bat. It was a piece of subtle rather than spectacula­r art. More Mozart than Metallica. The wicket broke the back of Super Giants, plunging them further into the abyss (77-5), before Ayush Badoni’s late blitz (55 from 35) resurrecte­d them, though eventually the youngster’s splendid effort couldn’t avert the fate.

The spectacula­r had winked earlier in the piece, in Kuldeep’s first over. Two immaculate googlies snared Marcus Stoinis and Nicholas Pooran, the two power-hitters in Super Giants’ middle order. The Stoinis one was slower (85kph), tossed up, and spun a trifle away from the right-hander, who swung blindly to his own peril. Stoinis misjudged the ball’s delicious drop and was a fraction earlier into the shot, and ended up lobbing the ball. Safe to assume that he had little clue about the characteri­stics of the delivery.

Neither did Pooran, who wishfully hung out his bat to where he presumed was the line of the ball. The ball might have seemed like an illusion, drifting away from him, then dropping suddenly, as though the laws of gravity suddenly woke up, and then turning through the gaping space between his bat and pad. Kuldeep was the magic dust that Capitals desperatel­y required to save another season from drifting away into pain, apart from pulling them up from the bottom space.

BRIEF SCORES: Lucknow Super Giants 167 for 7 in 20 overs (Ayush Badoni 55 not out, KL Rahul 39; Kuldeep Yadav 3/20, Khaleel Ahmed 2/41) lost to Delhi Capitals 170 for 4 in 18.1 overs (Jake Fraser-mcgurk 55, Rishabh Pant 41, Ravi Bishnoi 2/25) by six wickets

 ?? Sportzpics ?? Jake Fraser-mcgurk hit five sixes and two fours en route to his knock of 55 off 35 balls.
Sportzpics Jake Fraser-mcgurk hit five sixes and two fours en route to his knock of 55 off 35 balls.
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