Gulf News

How KKR revived their title hopes

- BY SHYAM A. KRISHNA Senior Associate Editor

How did the Kolkata Knight Riders make the IPL playoffs? The answer is simple: they turned around a stuttering 2021 campaign with some excellent displays in the UAE, and the qualificat­ion to the last four was a just reward for their consistenc­y.

Consistenc­y was hardly Kolkata’s forte in India, where they struggled to score on the slow pitches. The pitches undermined their batting after a rollicking start to Season 14.

Brendon McCullum of New Zealand is KKR’s chief coach and Eoin Morgan of England is the captain. They subscribe to the strategy of a blistering start, which can be perilous unless the team bat deep. It did work for New Zealand and England, but the plan returned mixed results for KKR. At least in Phase 1 of IPL 2021.

Kolkata were quick off the blocks in the early games as orthodox batsmen like Shubhman Gill and Nitish Rana cast away their straight jackets and pummelled the ball down the field in the power play. The strategy came unstuck when the openers fell cheaply. The middle-order was unable to shoulder the responsibi­lity, and the result was a string of demoralisi­ng losses. The Covid-induced break allowed KKR to reassess their strategy.

When Kolkata came to the UAE for Phase 2, their strength had diminished a bit. Pat Cummins, the Australian who provided express pace and long hits, was unavailabl­e. His replacemen­t Tim Southee was no all-rounder and not very effective in the absence of assistance for swing bowling. And the UAE is no place for swing bowlers.

The new KKR strategy

It didn’t matter. KKR reworked their approach. They no longer had the pace to attack, but they have superb spinners in Varun Chakravart­hy and Sunil Narine. The mystery spinners were employed in the power play to buy wickets; Chakravart­hy even opened the bowling on several occasions. And Southee

The Kolkata plan worked. When a team grabs a couple of wickets in the power play or stifles the scoring in the first six overs, the opposition is under pressure. This is precisely what Chakravart­hy and Narine did. Southee too picked up wickets in the power play, and after that, KKR could employ the mediumpace­rs to stem the scoring with the field spread out.

For a team that struggled to pick up six points from the seven games in India, Kolkata snatched eight from the next seven in the UAE. At 14 points, they were level with the Mumbai Indians but benefited from a vastly superior net run rate.

So what changed for Kolkata in the UAE? One significan­t aspect was the discovery of Venkatesh Iyer. He provided rousing starts in the company of Gill and helped slow the rival scoring with medium-pace that included a healthy diet of yorkers.

Even when the openers failed, there was Rahul Tripathi and Nitish Rana to keep the scoreboard. Dinesh Karthik provided the late-order hitting, although Morgan struggled for form.

Four wins in the last seven games point to a resurgence. Is it enough to steer them to the title? I don’t know. Because playoffs are tricky affairs. If you have a bad day in the office, it could be curtains. That’s precisely what KKR want to avoid.

How good are Kolkata’s chances? The Mumbai Indians are out of the way; that’s a huge relief. But the Chennai Super Kings are there. It shouldn’t worry KKR. They have the team to win. Just that they should play well in crunch situations.

A third IPL win for Kolkata could be a reality.

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