Gulam
Bodi said at the half-way stage that his team, Lions, may have fallen around 15
short of their desired total but a spirited performance with the ball in
favourable conditions was too much, even for a power-packed Delhi Daredevils
batting line-up. Following up on Bodi's half-century and Neil McKenzie's
death-over surge, Lions' Chris Morris bowled an outstanding spell and, backed
ably by his spinners, helped knock out the only remaining IPL team from the
Champions League. In doing so, Lions also kept alive the possibility of an
all-South African finale in this diverse franchise tournament.
Lions
managed a fighting 139 but Daredevils would have felt justified in their
decision to bowl first in overcast conditions amid plenty of breeze. Their
bowlers found swing, movement and good bounce, and the assistance lasted
through the game. But Daredevils had the batsmen to counter that and they'd
infused their line-up with more power up the order, with regular captain Mahela
Jayawardene, surprisingly, sitting out again to make way for David Warner in
the opening slot. Warner did attack, but briefly, and the early departure of
Daredevils' openers was key in Lions being able to keep the pressure on.
They
were helped by Virender Sehwag, who fell first ball trying to loft Sohail
Tanvir over mid-on only to be caught, though Warner and Kevin Pietersen staged
a counterattack. Both targeted Dirk Nannes, who was squeezed through extra
cover for two boundaries from Warner and thrashed down the ground by Pietersen.
But Morris, brought on first change, with his high-arm action, accuracy,
minimal but unsettling movement and encouraging bounce tightened one end up.
The bounce accounted for Warner, who top-edged a catch back to the bowler while
attempting to jab one on the leg side, and that began a phase of stagnation.
It
coincided with the introduction of spin, and Unmukt Chand found it difficult to
get a move-on. While Morris was probing away at one end, Aaron Phangiso and
Jean Symes, both left-arm spinners, gave little away, slowing it up often as
the batsman found it hard to connect desirably when often swinging across the
line. Overs six to ten yielded just 17 runs, Chand tied down at one end before
he went down holing out to long-on, desperately seeking a lift. Instead of Ross
Taylor, out came Irfan Pathan and his promotion failed. Nannes returned in the
14th over, attacking Taylor at No. 6 with a slip and the captain followed that
over, as Nannes reacted swiftly to his right to pluck a one-handed catch.
Miscalculation
was the feature of Daredevils' game, as Pathan's promotion followed the
decision to send in Pawan Negi ahead of Ajit Agarkar. This, despite Agarkar's
spunky batting that helped his team beat Perth Scorchers in their previous
completed game. Pietersen, stranded at one end, lost five of his partners in
one over after another before there was too much for him alone to achieve. With
48 needed off 24, he perished in the sixth over after the collapse began,
dismissed fittingly by Morris who had begun the choke with his miserly spell.
With Pietersen's fall, Daredevils' fate was sealed.
Bodi
and McKenzie played influential roles after their team was put in. Bodi, the
in-form batsman, was scratchy to begin with. His initial movement across gave
him a hard time against the bounce from Morne Morkel and swing from Pathan.
The
innings was set back by a wicket-maiden from birthday boy Umesh Yadav and
Daredevils had edged ahead with Lions 63 for 3 at the end of the 11th over. In
the interim, Bodi had started to get going, playing to his strengths against
Pietersen's slow ones by lofting them past extra cover. He swung against Negi
with the turn to launch him over deep square leg and built a solid association
with the experienced McKenzie, who stayed on till the end. The pair ran well,
McKenzie scored boundaries on both sides of the wicket, even pulled Morkel for
six, in a stand worth 59 in 44 balls.
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