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Langeveldt, Shukla knock defending champions
out
From Christina Palmer
DURBAN—The much-ridiculed underdogs of this year, Kolkata Knight Riders,
have ended the tournament for the defending champions, but not before
they almost made a mess of the chase. Laxmi Shukla was the saviour for
Kolkata, after they had stumbled to 45 for 6 in 11.3 overs. They had
Charl Langeveldt to thank for pinning down Rajasthan Royals, and his 3
for 15 exposed Kolkata's blunder of not playing him throughout the
tournament.
The lesson to learn was not to write off Rajasthan till the end. Not
even when they are defending just 101 in a must-win game. At the
half-way mark, after a frenzied innings during which they added just 79
to the 22 they got from the first over, the tournament seemed all over
for Rajasthan. One final twist remained.
Even that seemed to be flattening out soon after Brendon McCullum hit
two boundaries off the first two balls of the chase. The final figures
of Munaf Patel after those two fours, 4-0-14-2, epitomised the comeback.
Munaf got Sourav Ganguly in that first over, and Amit Singh sent back
McCullum with the first ball he bowled from the other end. That was the
piece of fortune Rajasthan needed, as the half-tracker rose only as high
as McCullum's knees. On a cracking pitch, Shane Warne's innovative field
placings, and smart bowling by his bowlers worked superbly after that.
Even Brad Hodge and David Hussey, the pair who was key during Kolkata's
chase of 189 against Chennai Super Kings, found it extremely difficult
to score.
Naman Ojha did superbly to dismiss Brad Hodge, who looked to run after
dropping Johan Botha's first delivery at his feet. He had barely taken a
step, but couldn't make his way back. More pressure and smart bowling
followed. Botha and Warne followed the first seven-over spell of 30 runs
by the medium-pacers with a five-over spell of 17. And wickets fell
consistently throughout. Hussey got a top-edge thanks to Botha's extra
bounce, and Shoaib Shaikh ran himself out. But when Shukla, was dropped
on 6 off a Warne flipper by Ojha, the final turnaround started.
Shukla batted sensibly, choosing well when to go bog, and when to
accumulate. He knew he needed only two or three big hits, which would be
enough to set the cat among the pigeons. His first break came when he
went after Warne in the 13th over, and cleared the wide long-on boundary
easily.
His next assault came in Ravindra Jadeja's second over, the 16th of the
innings. Shukla went over extra cover first ball, and managed three more
couples through that over. It was indeed a tough match for Jadeja, who
was involved in two run-outs, failed to make up for those run-outs, and
then bowled one over too many. Shukla's turnaround finished as it
started, with some luck from behind the wicket, as Ojha missed on two
run-out opportunities as Shukla and Ajit Agarkar stole two byes in the
19th and 20th.
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