Mumbai Indians 177 for 4 (Rana 53, Rohit 40*, Tye 2-34) beat Gujarat Lions 176 for 4 (McCullum 64, Karthik 48*, McClenaghan 2-24) by 6 wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Nitish Rana’s 53 off 36 set up Mumbai’s chase © BCCI
The chase-friendly image of Wankhede Stadium has survived yet another test. On a slow pitch, Gujarat Lions rode a mature 64 off 44 from Brendon McCullum and a blinder from Dinesh Karthik to get 176, which McCullum reckoned was 15 above par given the conditions. However, Nitish Rana – highest run-getter in the tournament now – and Keiron Pollard made light work of the target, making it 19 wins for teams batting second in the last 21 matches at Wankhede. Mumbai Indians solidified their lead at the top of the table with four wins in five matches.
Lions did seem to be putting Mumbai into early strife when Rana top-edged Basil Thampi in the second over. However, Jason Roy, replacing Aaron Finch whose kit didn’t make it with the rest of the luggage, dropped the catch, which could have reduced Mumbai to 11 for 2. By the time Rana finally fell, for 53 off 36, Mumbai were well on their way, at 85 for 2 in the 10th over. Pollard, carrying on from his match-winning batting last match, and Rohit Sharma, slowly rediscovering form, saw the hosts through with three balls to spare
McClenaghan and Malinga start Mumbai off
Mitchell McClenaghan hasn’t had the best of tournaments, but with the last match on he seems to have rediscovered his touch. He began with the wicket Dwayne Smith in the first over, and ended up with figures of 2 for 24 in four overs. It was a pitch he loved, giving him purchase if he banged the ball into the pitch. Malinga’s figures showed his worst IPL figures, but that took some excellent hitting from McCullum. They bowled two overs each in the Powerplay, which cost Mumbai just 46.
Harbhajan and Krunal go wide
One of the few offspinners doing well in T20 cricket, Harbhajan Singh – 1 for 22 in four overs – extended his dominance over Suresh Raina, and in partnership he and Krunal Pandya stifled Gujarat in the middle overs. The scoreboard will show Harbhajan was slog-swept for two boundaries by McCullum, but they were both hits that went at a catchable height with a deep midwicket in place. McCullum couldn’t hit those for usual sixes because the spinners bowled excellent wide lines to both the batsmen, and controlled the amount of turn on the ball.
Raina finally fell to a wide ball from Harbhajan for just 28 off 29. This was the fifth time he had got out to Harbhajan in the IPL, the most against any bowler. Gujarat were now 81 for 1 in the 11th over. A full straight ball from Malinga soon got McCullum when the latter has just begun to look good for a century. Gujarat 99 for in the 14th over.
Mumbai win cat-and-mouse
The fall of Raina brought out Ishan Kishan, and the demise of McCullum send in Karthik. In the dugout sat the big-hitting Roy. Now, on paper Krunal bowled only three overs, but he and Rohit Sharma’s canny captaincy had much to do with the absence of Roy for 89% of Gujarat’s innings. In T20 cricket in 2016, Roy scored just 14 off 21 balls from left-arm spin and got out twice. Now seeing that Gujarat were not sending out Roy, Rohit held back that over from Krunal, which he eventually didn’t even bowl. As a result, though, Roy faced only seven balls, off which he got 14, and Kishan instead faced 14 balls for just 11 runs. Krunal contributed more than just 3-0-18-0.
Gujarat end on a high
Karthik, striking at 145.45 this season, took the slow pitch out of the equation with clean hitting, excellent placement and desperate running in his unbeaten 48 off 26. Two of Karthik’s four quickest innings have come this season. This one resulted in 77 off 38 for Gujarat since he came out to bat.
Rana runs away
Benefitting from that drop, Rana displayed his season form again, taking the orange cap from Gautam Gambhir, who had an altercation with the Delhi coach after Rana had been dropped. Rana hit both off the front foot and back, both into the leg side and off, picked the slower balls and used the pace on the quicker ones. With Jos Buttler he added 85 in nine overs, leaving Mumbai with 92 off 64 balls.
Pollard ends it
When Rohit chose to field, he said he was expecting dew to play a part in the last 10 overs of the match. While Buttler fell to a slower short ball after yet another decent start and while Rohit – relieved no doubt that Gujarat didn’t have a legspinner, it was Pollard who took the slowness out of the equation, hitting three sixes in his 23-ball 39. Thampi, who had been denied a maiden IPL wicket by that Roy drop, produced a fantastic 18th over of six yorkers for six singles to leave 17 required off two overs. Pollard now took a risk, and was caught at deep midwicket, but Rohit was composed in finishing off with 4, 2 and 2 with eight required in the last over.
Sidharth Monga is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
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Source: ESPN Crickinfo