Though Perth Scorchers were eliminated after this defeat, they showed
typical Australian tenaciousness to take the match to the final over. On
a track where it was tough for the batsmen to time the ball, Scorchers
could run up only 121, a score which is rarely defended in Twenty20
cricket and which looked even smaller given the heavyweights in the
Daredevils batting. The heads didn't drop, however, and they steadily
chipped away at the Daredevils.
Their appetite for a scrap was highlighted by Nathan Rimmington. In the
15th over, Virender Sehwag, nearing a half-century and the last big-name
batsman remaining, slashed a chance to third man, where Rimmington
fluffed the catch, and for a six too. In a low-scoring match, that
seemed the slip that would seal Scorchers' fate. Instead, Rimmington hit
back by removing Irfan Pathan off the very next delivery, and then
getting the critical wicket of Sehwag three balls later.
That set up a tense finale. Naman Ojha, the last recognised batsman, put
away a short delivery from Brad Hogg for four, but was otherwise ill at
ease. He nicked a jaffa from Nathan Coulter-Nile to the keeper in the
18th over but wasn't given out, though two balls later he edged it once
more, and this time there was no need for the umpire to even raise his
finger as the deviation was so clear.
Three wickets in hand, and 17 to get off the final two overs on a
difficult track. Not a problem for Agarkar, who carved an inside-out
lofted off drive for four in the penultimate over, before crashing a low
full toss for four on the first ball of the final over to ease
Daredevils towards victory.
The trickiness of the pitch was shown by Sehwag's scoring pattern.
Usually a batsman who loves the boundaries, and isn't the keenest
between the wickets, Sehwag had to run 30 of his 52 and was regularly
looking for the quick single, instead of the massive hit out of the
park. He was the only one of the Daredevils batting stars to get to
double-digits: Mahela Jayawardene guided a half-volley to short fine
leg, Ross Taylor missed a straighter one from Michael Beer and Kevin
Pietersen miscued to backward point.
Daredevils' other overseas player, Morne Morkel, was at his best,
though, as were the rest of their four-pronged pace attack. After Morkel
bowled Herschelle Gibbs in the first over, Shaun Marsh and Simon Katich
re-built the innings with a 73-run stand. They could step up the pace,
though, and just as they looked to open out, Agarkar removed both to
suck the momentum midway through the innings.
Morkel, Daredevils' bowler of the tournament in the IPL, then returned
to inflict more damage. The highlight was the 19th over, when with
Scorchers looking to swing at everything, he conceded just a single and
dismissed the dangerous Mitchell Marsh.
Despite the batting letdown, Scorchers gave it their all but couldn't
dent the chances of the only IPL team still alive in the tournament.



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