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Ken Borland



Mumbai win thanks to Malinga 2

Posted on May 03, 2012 by Ken

Another giant bowling performance by Lasith Malinga at the death led the Mumbai Indians to a thrilling one-run victory over the Pune Warriors in their Indian Premier League match at the Subrata Roy Sahara Stadium on Thursday.

 – http://www.supersport.com/cricket/indian-premier-league/news/120503/Mumbai_win_thanks_to_Malinga

Pune were chasing just 121 for victory and the gutsy Mithun Manhas took them to the brink against the powerful Mumbai attack that produced a massive effort to make up for their batsmen’s failings.

 

Manhas scored 42 not off 34 balls and was particularly strong square on the off side. But he was unable to produce the boundary-hits required through the leg-side and, with Mumbai captain Harbhajan Singh putting a tight screen on the off-side, Manhas did not score another boundary after the first ball of the 18th over and in fact scored just seven runs off his last seven balls.

Malinga finished with 2-25 in four overs and, with Pune needing 36 runs in the last four overs, the Sri Lankan star took 2-13 in his last two overs.

The Slinga began by bowling Saurav Ganguly, who was in scratchy form, for 16 and then out-thought Wayne Parnell (2) with full, wide deliveries that eventually led to the left-hander steering a catch into the hands of Robin Peterson at backward-point.

After Malinga’s brilliance, Pune needed 12 off Munaf Patel’s last over and Bhuvneswar Kumar put them in with a chance by hitting the Indian seamer inside-out over extra cover for four. It left the Warriors needing four runs off the last ball for victory but, despite Munaf producing a low full-toss on leg-stump, Bhuvneswar could only flick it to deep midwicket for two runs.

The Pune home crowd had spent most of the innings in stunned disbelief as a very average batting performance meant they made extremely heavy weather of chasing a mediocre total.

Opener Robin Uthappa had played some wonderful drives in his 18 before the aggressive Munaf trapped him lbw and the miserly Harbhajan then removed Jesse Ryder (9) and the fluent Australian captain Michael Clarke (14).

Clarke had shown some great footwork to the crafty off-spinner and his lbw decision, sweeping after getting in a good stride, looked a particularly harsh decision, especially with Harbhajan bowling around the wicket.

AWFUL COLLAPSE

Left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha then used his skill to rush an arm-ball through the advancing Steve Smith (2) and James Franklin showed his utility value with a valuable spell of three overs for 20 runs.

The powerhouse Mumbai attack, led by Malinga, then finished the job despite Manhas’s brave efforts to go after the required runs.

The spin of Harbhajan (4-0-18-2) and Ojha (4-0-24-1) was crucial in maintaining the pressure on the Warriors, while Munaf bowled splendidly with the new ball and in the crucial final over to also finish with 1-24.

The Pune Warriors seamers had earlier bowled with pace and intensity as they restricted the Mumbai Indians to 120 for nine.

Bhuvneshwar was the star of the show with figures of 2-9 in three overs, while Ashish Nehra recovered brilliantly from his first over costing 14 runs to finish with 2-19.

Sachin Tendulkar top-scored with 34, but his innings took 35 balls and his frustration was apparent as his mediocre IPL continued. It was his highest score of the season and it took his tally to just 128 runs in six innings.

All eyes were on Tendulkar as he took three successive fours off Ashok Dinda in the fourth over, but Nehra’s tight line proved his undoing as The Little Master was caught behind in the 12th over.

Tendulkar had glued the top-order together after the loss of Franklin, caught off Bhuvneshwar for 25, and Rohit Sharma, run out by Smith for three, in the first half of the innings, but his departure led to an awful collapse as Mumbai lost six wickets for 39 runs in the last eight overs.

Peterson, strangely promoted up the order to number four, scored 13 before he skied a pull off Nehra to mid-on, while Ambati Rayudu made room to slash through the off-side but was totally deceived and bowled by a slower ball rolled out by Bhuvneshwar.

Dinesh Karthik was left to bat with the tail and struggled through to the end of the innings to score 18 not out, with the visitors’ appalling running between the wickets leading to the downfall of Thisara Perera (0), Malinga (14) and Ojha (1).

Smith, one of the best fielders in the competition, was involved in two more of the run outs, while Parnell bowled superbly in the death overs to concede just 18 runs in his four overs.

Parnell was also excellent in the field, snatching a great catch at short extra cover to dismiss the Mumbai captain, Harbhajan, for a first-ball duck off the bowling of Dinda.

Peterson & Rayudu see Mumbai home 2

Posted on April 25, 2012 by Ken

Robin Peterson and Ambati Rayudu saw the Mumbai Indians home as they snatched a thrilling four-wicket victory over the Kings XI at the Punjab Cricket Association Stadium in Mohali on Wednesday.

 – http://www.supersport.com/cricket/indian-premier-league/news/120425/Peterson_Rayudu_see_Mumbai_home

The South African came to the crease with Mumbai needing 34 runs off just 14 balls and Peterson plundered 16 not out off seven balls, with two fours and a six off successive deliveries.

Questions will be asked as to Peterson’s treatment by captain Harbhajan Singh, who bowled him for just one over, while he conceded 29 runs in three overs, and then batted before the left-hander but made a two-ball duck.

Rayudu blasted 34 not out off 17 balls, with a pair of fours and sixes, and hit the winning boundary as Mumbai won with a ball to spare.

The visitors needed 32 off the last two overs and Punjab will be ruing leg-spinner Piyush Chawla’s penultimate over of the innings, which cost an astonishing 27 runs.

Peterson, a clever cricketer who will always find a way to score, used a reverse-sweep and a switch-hit to hit the first two balls for four and then launched a slog-sweep for six.

Rayudu then hit the last two balls of the over for six, leaving Mumbai with just five runs to get off Azhar Mahmood’s final over and they did it in singles before the 26-year-old Indian prospect finished the match with a crunching cover drive.

The Kings XI probably thought they had the game in the bag after Mahmood and seamer Parvinder Awana had reduced Mumbai, chasing 169, to 135 for six in the 18th over.

Mumbai will be concerned that they collapsed after a good start, James Franklin (22) and Sachin Tendulkar (34) putting on 52 for the first wicket, before Rohit Sharma added a quickfire 50 off just 30 balls, with three sixes.

But the introduction of Pakistani paceman Mahmood brought a flurry of quick wickets as he had both openers caught behind by Nitin Saini.

The next over saw Chawla claim his one wicket as Dinesh Karthik (3) picked out Mahmood at short fine leg with a scoop shot.

Awana claimed the key wicket of Kieron Pollard for just three when the elevation of the West Indian’s flick over midwicket was just not enough and he was caught by Mandeep Singh.

Rohit then obviously became the key man as he played probably his best innings of the tournament before he slashed the nagging medium-pace of Awana to the sharp Mahmood at backward point.

The wicket of Harbhajan fell two balls later, but the skills of Peterson and Rayudu were enough to complete the victory.

The experienced Mahmood, who finished with two for 23, and Praveen Kumar, who conceded just 25 runs in his four overs, were the best of the Punjab bowlers.

David Hussey had earlier put his younger teammates to shame as he almost single-handedly steered the Kings XI to 168 for three.

Captain Hussey, the younger brother of Australian star Michael, slammed 68 not out off 40 balls to lift the home team to a competitive total on a pitch that was tough to score on when the ball got soft or the pace was taken off.

The 34-year-old made twice as many runs as any of his teammates, with South African David Miller’s 34 not out being the next highest score.

The multi-faceted Mumbai attack – seven bowlers were used – was initially pretty effective in stifling the run-rate and left-armer RP Singh was excellent up front, taking one for 27 in four overs.

Run-scoring was a little easier against the new ball and openers Saini and Mandeep put on 35 in the first five overs before Mandeep was caught behind off Singh for 22.

With Saini leaving the crease for 17 two overs later, his skied hook shot off paceman Clint McKay going to fine leg, the two Australians and Punjab’s most experienced batsmen – Shaun Marsh and Hussey – were brought together.

Marsh struggled to 17 off 26 balls before medium-pacer Franklin had him caught in an outstanding 13th over that cost just five runs, but Hussey batted through to the close.

Generally playing with a straight bat, Hussey punched his way to four fours and four sixes and was a cut above the other Kings XI batsmen.

But Miller served up a blistering cameo in the closing overs, lashing his 34 not out off just 17 balls, with two of his sixes coming off the last two balls of the innings, bowled by Munaf Patel, who the left-hander had also hit for six in his previous over.

Munaf had bowled his first two overs for just nine runs, including a maiden, but fell apart at the death as Hussey and Miller plundered 32 runs off his last 12 deliveries.

It said little for Harbhajan’s captaincy that spinner Peterson, who bowled the first over of the innings and conceded just three runs, was not used again, with the captain coming in for punishment as his three overs cost 29 runs.

Franklin also just bowled the single over.

Pune bowlers break Mumbai hearts 0

Posted on April 20, 2012 by Ken

The Pune Warriors bowlers were able to break through regularly as they limited the Mumbai Indians to 100 for nine to clinch a 29-run victory in their Indian Premier League match at the Wankhede Stadium on Friday.

– http://www.supersport.com/cricket/article.aspx?id=1329151

It was a shock victory for the Warriors, who finished last in their debut IPL season last year and were playing away from home at the daunting stadium of one of the tournament favourites, and especially since they were only defending 130.

But the Mumbai Indians were in trouble immediately as new T20 sensation Richard Levi was stumped by Robin Uthappa for a duck off the second ball of the innings bowled by left-arm spinner Murali Kartik.

Ashok Dinda then opened the bowling from the Garware Pavilion End and produced a performance to rival that of Mumbai Indians’ star Lasith Malinga.

Dinda produced a double-wicket strike in his first over, having Ambati Rayadu caught at slip and then having Rohit Sharma caught behind by Uthappa, both for singles.

Mumbai were five for three before James Franklin and Dinesh Karthik added 49 for the fourth wicket to stabilise the innings. But the required surge of runs never came, although an exciting ending still looked likely as the home side reached 48 for three after 10 overs.

But the Pune spinners tightened their grip to strangulation point, with Karthik (32) surprised by a quicker, big-turning delivery from Kartik and being stumped by Uthappa.

Debutant Suryakumar Yadav was then bowled for a duck by a fizzing arm-ball from off-spinner Marlon Samuels and Kieron Pollard (8) was bowled by a similar quicker delivery by leg-spinner Rahul Sharma.

The big-hitting Pollard had been left with too much to do by Franklin, who tried none of the big hits required in the closing stages of a T20 match when more than 10 runs an over are required.

It’s fitting that when Franklin did finally try and hit out, in the 18th over, the bat went flying from his hands and the ball was skied to Callum Ferguson at long-on to give Dinda his third wicket. The New Zealander initially did a good job for his team, but it was heartbreaking for the home crowd to see him pushing singles when so much more was required. Franklin finished with 32 off 42 balls and his dismissal ended Mumbai’s hopes.

Pune captain Saurav Ganguly said at the toss that he expected the pitch to turn more in the second innings, and his trio of spinners produced a top-class performance to back up a canny display of leadership in the field.

While seamer Dinda finished with a phenomenal 4-17 in four overs, it was the pressure exerted by the spinners that helped him to his success.

The merry tunes played by Kartik (3-0-14-2), Rahul (4-0-16-1) and Samuels (4-0-21-1) would see the Mumbai batsmen spellbound and frustrated as Pune pulled off an impressive mugging at a packed Wankhede Stadium.

South African left-armer Wayne Parnell bowled a couple of top-class deliveries as he finished with a creditable 1-18 in three overs, claiming a late wicket when he had Malinga caught behind by a slick Uthappa for five.

The fact that none of the Pune bowlers conceded more than 6.5 runs per over told the story as the Mumbai Indians showed the fragility of their batting line-up without the injured and talismanic Sachin Tendulkar, who has not recovered from the finger injury suffered in the opening game.

IPL’S LEADING WICKET-TAKER

Malinga had earlier become the leading wicket-taker in IPL history as the powerful Mumbai Indians attack restricted the Pune Warriors to just 129 for nine.

 

Malinga, the Sri Lankan star, led the way with outstanding figures of 2-16 in his four overs – the first runs scored by a batsman off his bowling came after 11 balls.

The unorthodox slinger now has 65 wickets in 44 matches, overtaking Rudra Pratap Singh’s 64 wickets in 56 games.

Malinga was magnificent up front after the Mumbai Indians had decided to bowl first, bowling Manish Pandey for a duck in a wicket-maiden first over and then conceding just three runs in his second over. The 28-year-old returned in the 17th over with almost the same effectiveness.

Despite the slog being on, he conceded just 13 runs in his last two overs and bowled the dangerous Samuels for four with another trademark swinging yorker.

With off-spinner Harbhajan Singh sharing the new ball and doing a great job as well, the Pune batsmen were feeling their way from the start and Uthappa (36 off 33 balls) and Steven Smith (39 off 32) were the only ones to bat with any authority.

Paceman Munaf Patel also produced a top-class display as he took 2-26 in four overs, nipping a delivery back into Parnell (11) and bowling the South African left-hander, and then having Smith caught off a slower ball in a marvellous final over that cost just five runs.

Mumbai captain Harbhajan was also impressive with 1-16 in three overs, dismissing opposite number Ganguly (3).

Left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha would come on later and also do a great job, taking 1-23 in four overs and turning the ball sharply.

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    Galatians 5:25 – “Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep walking in step with the Spirit.”

    There is only one Christ and all things that are preached in his name must conform to his character. We can only know Christ’s character through an intimate and personal relationship with him.

    How would Christ respond in situations in which you find yourself? Would he be underhanded? Would he be unforgiving and cause broken relationships?

    “The value of your faith and the depth of your spiritual experience can only be measured by their practical application in your daily life. You can spend hours at mass crusades; have the ability to pray in public; quote endlessly from the Word; but if you have not had a personal encounter with the living Christ your outward acts count for nothing.” – Solly Ozrovech, A Shelter From The Storm

     

     



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