Kolkata Knight Riders 222 for 6 (Shreyas 50, Salt 48, Green 2-35) beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru 221 (Jacks 55, Patidar 52, Russell 3-25 by one run
Plans made, plans fall apart
RCB did beautifully to keep Sunil Narine quiet. While most teams do know enough not to give him any room, they went a step further, dropped all pretense and tried to bowl nothing but leg-stump yorkers to him. KKR’s biggest hitter this season needed eight balls to get off the mark. Salt came to his opening partner’s rescue though hitting 10 of the first 13 balls to the boundary and flirting with the fastest fifty of the season. He could have had it too but in going for another six – to a ball that was very hittable – he got caught at deep midwicket. Still, 48 off 14 with seven fours and three sixes is nothing to scoff at.
The middle overs slowdown
Small margins
Andre Russell had walked in during the 14th over. At the time of the 18th, he was still 11 off 13 with only one hit to the fence, and it was along the ground. Still, he was toying with the bowlers.
Yash Dayal was desperate to keep the ball out of his hitting arc, which forced him to spray one too wide outside off and another too wide outside leg, which also beat the keeper and went for four. To make matters worse, that was a no-ball.
Dayal was only trying to do the right thing but it is so hard in this format. A nine-ball over ended with Shreyas pinging the long-on boundary twice and yielding 22 runs. RCB trusted him to close the innings out but that over went for 16 runs. Once again, he did the right things. Went wide yorker, but missed the mark and got hit. Took pace off, but Muscle Russell found a way. Recovered to string two yorkers and a bouncer that cost only three runs but the last ball was cleverly ramped for four by Ramandeep.
Jacks and Patidar step up
Russell goes slow, Starc goes fast
RCB were 77% favourites at this point, needing 86 off 54 balls. Then on came Russell for his first over of the night and knocked over both of RCB’s half-centurions. For a guy who wants to look like a UFC fighter, he keeps sucker-punching people. Running in nice and hard. Properly powering through his action. That tree-trunk like shoulder whipping the ball down the pitch. But then the fingers do their magic, and all of a sudden, a batter prepping for 140kph is caught off guard with 115kph.
Starc has not learned that lesson yet. He has found all his success – even here in the IPL when he was wearing the opposition’s colours – by trusting his pace and his accuracy. According to ESPNcricnfo ball-by-ball data, he has attempted a slower ball only 11 times this season. It is part of why he has given up 44 boundaries, the most by any bowler in IPL 2024. The opposition sets up for his thunderbolts, which in India, don’t kiss the pitch and fly through. They sit up to be smacked.
However, people under pressure trust what has worked for them in the past and the Starc yorker is still money. He went for it. It came out as a low full toss. Karn, who had already carved three sixes off near yorkers, set up to smash it down the ground. But this time he couldn’t get enough power on it. He could only bunt it and Starc was agile enough to dive to his right and come up with a blinder. That was the most decisive play in a game that was filled with them. Pace on for the win. Who knew.
Alagappan Muthu is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
Source: ESPN Crickinfo