Posts Tagged ‘CSK’

Mongoose Spits Venom as CSK squeeze past the Daredevils

Friday, March 19th, 2010

In what proved to be a return to competitive cricket at IPL 3, the Chennai Super Kings beat the Delhi Daredevils by 5 wickets, with 5 balls to spare, on a slightly two-faced Kotla wicket this Friday afternoon. Although the pitch did act up from time to time, for the most part it was a featherbed, as Virender Sehwag and Matthew Hayden, as well as a debutant mongoose bat will attest to.

The Cobra

Dinesh Karthik, captaining in place of the injured Gautam Gambhir, won the toss and chose to bat first. As is his wont, Sehwag didn’t waste any time, and toyed with the Super Kings bowlers much as a cobra would toy with its prey – tormenting them, taunting them, and then zap! Another ball dispatched into or over the ropes. Even though Warner departed relatively early, things looked ominous as delivery after delivery disappeared.

Debut skipper Suresh Raina must have wondered whether bad karma from a previous life was at work, until the evergreen Murali struck with two wickets in an over – the mercurial Dilshan falling first, giving Raina the first (and easiest) of the three catches he ended up taking. What followed had a sense of déjà vu about it, as Justin Kemp reprised his heroics for the Hyderabad Heroes in the ICL, grasping a Sehwag clout one-handed, out of thin air, inches short of the boundary line – a truly brilliant catch.

From then on, the Delhi innings could only trundle where it had once galloped. It took a late surge from Rajat Bhatia to bump their score up to 185. Chennai were superb in the field – the second and third of the afore-mentioned catches by Raina were outstanding – something which has certainly been improved on since last year’s farcical state of affairs.

The Super Kings’ innings started well, with 4 boundaries coming off Umesh Yadav’s first over. Parthiv Patel was then run out by a combination of poor calling and superman skills from AB Devilliers. It didn’t help that Patel also appeared to have the turning circle of a luxury cruise liner. Hayden knocked another one to the fence and then called for the much-awaited mongoose bat.

The Mongoose

The blade belongs to a bat that Sachin Tendulkar might have used when he was, say, a foot shorter than he is today. But it’s all meat, and there’s a long handle to go with it. If Sehwag was a cobra, then it was apt that a mongoose would be needed to counter him. (Oh, and if you didn’t see this ‘joke’ coming, please drop an email to sportsnob@gmail.com for further instructions)

Hayden went berserk. 18 runs came off a Rajat Bhatia over, with three fours and six. Dilshan wasn’t so lucky – 21 came off one of his overs, including 3 maximums – and the big Aussie reached his 50 off 24 balls. The thing about this bat is, even the shots which don’t appear to be well timed seem to accelerate in mid-air after leaving the blade. By the time Haydos departed to an outstanding catch by Dilshan, diving forward at mid-on, he had plundered 93 runs off 43 balls.

Morkel departed soon-after, and suddenly the game appeared to be on again. However, a steady 49 by Suresh Raina and a quickfire dozen from Murali Vijay meant that the Super Kings squeezed home – the skipper clearing the ropes off the first ball of the final over to win the match.

After two days of incredibly one-sided matches, it was good to see a game contested till the death again. However, the main takeaway from this contest, more than anything, was the brutal introduction of the mongoose to the IPL.

Picture Courtesy: Sky Sports

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

Chennai Super Kings give Knight Riders a Royal Hiding

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

The Super Kings stormed back in style on Tuesday night, hammering the Kolkata Knight Riders by 55 runs to take them into third place in the nascent IPL league table. As this correspondent noted two days ago, the Bengali outfit are nearly as overhyped as their owner’s acting skills, and their meek capitulation to a Dhoni-driven Chennai side went some way towards proving it.

KKR got off to a more than decent start, getting rid of the potentially dangerous Matthew Hayden early on. Things were going swimmingly, with regular wickets being taken, until MS Dhoni got going with Badrinath providing an able supporting role. Shane Bond bowled a beautiful line and length, while Murali Karthik made yet another case for a return from the international wilderness – his 4 overs yielded no boundaries, a rarity in this form of the game.

However, Ganguly’s men were powerless when faced with the might of the Indian Captain’s bottom hand. Having scored a measly 81 runs from the first 14 overs of their innings, one would have thought anything from here on in would be too little too late. What followed was nothing short of a violent assault, as 83 runs came off the final 36 balls, Dhoni finishing with a stunning 66 of 33 deliveries – the highlight undoubtedly being the flattest six you will ever see, knocking over a couple of tiger mascots stationed just beyond the mid wicket boundary.

In reply, Kolkata were never really allowed to get going – the rot started in the first over, when Brad Hodge pulled the ball straight to Ashwin at mid wicket. Manoj Tiwary smacked a couple of fours off Manpreet Gony before having his stumps rearranged – he scored 8 runs off 3 balls. Wickets continued to fall with alarming regularity, and every single bowler (bar Suresh Raina) got in on the act. A great team performance by the boys in yellow.

Tomorrow night promises to be a right corker though – the Mumbai Indians take on the Delhi Daredevils in what promises to be the match of the tournament thus far. Come back tomorrow for the review.

Picture Courtesy: Chennai 365

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

Kings Beheaded at Home

Monday, March 15th, 2010

While one might say the Super Kings have always been slow starters, that things will come together in the fullness of time, that Yes, we will most definitely reach the semi-finals, I believe the thing that says it all last night was the fact that a stray dog spent more time on the pitch than all the CSK batsmen combined.

Admittedly, the ground staff were more than a little lax – after the first few abortive attempts to chase it off the field, they sort of adopted an air of resignation. Even the fielders ignored it completely, which is a shame, because if they’d put their foot down and waited for it to leave, Chennai might have earned a creditable draw against the current IPL champions (thanks to the match being abandoned, of course).

Anyway, I digress. There were very few positives to take from last night’s performance at the M A Chidambaram stadium. Ashwin Ravichandran bowled fairly well, and the Kings’ fielding was more than adequate, as evinced by the three run outs they effected. Two things puzzled me – firstly, why on earth did Dhoni give Sudeep Tyagi the final over of the Chargers’ innings? It was clear to all and sundry that he wasn’t hitting his straps and was low on confidence. Which brings me to the second bewilderer – why didn’t Raina get a bowl last night?

Chennai’s batting was quite possibly a tribute to Brett Lee’s band – Six and Out seemed to be the order of the day. Every time a batsman hit a six, he would end up getting out within the space of 4 deliveries. Some of the shot selection – Raina’s and Badri’s in particular – was abysmal. Chaminda Vaas bowled brilliantly – castling Murali, accepting Raina’s gift, and then drawing a false shot from Hayden.

Here’s hoping things change tomorrow night against a very overhyped Kolkata outfit.

Picture Courtesy: The Hindu

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]