Sydney's batsmen weren't able to impose themselves on a pitch with
bounce that was steep and spongy. Only three of the top seven batsmen
made it out of single digits for Sydney: Michael Lumb's 28 was full of
mis-timed pulls but gave the innings a satisfactory start, Nic
Maddinson's 27 was at breakneck speed and attempted to blaze his team
out of trouble, and Steve Smith's run-a-ball 41 was a repair job that
did not grow into more.
A target of 137 might have been easier to achieve against most other
teams but Sydney's pace attack and their exceptional fielding never let
Mumbai stage a breakaway. The margin of victory was only 12 in the end,
but the game was lost long before that. Mumbai scored 20 futile runs off
the final over.
Mumbai opened with Dwayne Smith and Sachin Tendulkar and they struggled
to get going against Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins. The
ball seamed and bounced under lights and Mumbai cobbled together 30 for
0 after six overs. Just when they had begun to gain momentum, with
Smith and Tendulkar clearing the boundary, Moises Henriques removed both
within four balls in the ninth over, leaving Mumbai 53 for 2.
Rohit Sharma began to repair the chase but he was run out by a direct
hit from Cummins. Rohit vented anger at being sent back by Dinesh
Karthik, who had dropped the ball at his feet and taken a few steps down
the pitch. Karthik was also run out later, as he was forced to run
around a back-pedaling Henriques and was caught short by McCullum's
direct hit. Thereafter, Mumbai simply went through the motions.
Sydney's innings had a start that was worse than Mumbai's after Brad
Haddin chose to bat. They had been 33 for 0 but slumped to 40 for 3.
Maddinson began an audacious counterattack by upper cutting his first
ball, off Lasith Malinga no less, over the keeper for six. He swept the
left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha twice to the leg-side boundary and then
smashed the ball into the second tier beyond long-on. While Smith was
steadying the innings, Maddinson went about giving it momentum, until he
was caught short by a direct hit from Malinga at point. Henriques was
done in by a Harbhajan Singh arm-ball, and Sydney had lost two wickets
for one run.
Their hopes for a Smith-propelled finish ended in the 18th over, when
Malinga beat a cheeky paddle and hit the stumps. McCullum, playing for
Watson, was the fourth person to make a double-digit score and he led
them to 136. It was below-par for this surface, but enough for Sydney's
crack bowling attack.



0 comments:
Post a Comment