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Patidar, Harshal carry RCB to Qualifier 2

26 May, 2022 5:22 PM, Thu

Patidar, Harshal carry RCB to Qualifier 2

In what was an absolutely nerve-wracking, high-scoring contest, befitting the stature of an Eliminator, Royal Challengers Bangalore held their nerve, pulled off a 14-run victory over the Lucknow Super Giants, and booked a date with the Rajasthan Royals in Ahmedabad for the second Qualifier. How's that for drama at the death The final strategic time-out was taken post the 13th over with the Super Giants needing 99 runs to win off the last seven overs. KL Rahul and Deepak Hooda, who were in for quite some time, finally upped a gear. It started off with a 16-run over off Josh Hazlewood, an 18-run over next off Wanindu Hasaranga where Marcus Stoinis came in, 10 off Mohammad Siraj in the 16th over, 14 off Hasaranga in the 17th, and then the first two balls off the 18th over, bowled by Harshal Patel, were two wides, one of them even going for a boundary. The equation was down to 35 off 18 balls, and Lucknow, all of a sudden were looking favourites. But Patel, in typically clinical fashion, struck back with a couple of dots, followed by the wicket of Stoinis, before Hazlewood returned in the 19th over to finally get rid of Rahul and kill the game. The middle-overs stagnation All said and done, it's the middle overs where Lucknow lost the plot. Both Rahul and Hooda, despite being set, just couldn't get going, and managed just 40 runs in the six overs from 7-13. Wanindu Hasanga, Harshal and Shahbaz Ahmed bowled two overs each, took pace off the ball, and the batsmen swung a little too hard at everything, lost their shape big time, and in the process dug themselves a hole too deep to get out from. Rajat "Stunning" Patidar This match is going down in history as that Rajat Patidar smash-a-thon. His, 54-ball 112, studded with 12 fours and seven sixes, was by far the most complete knock by an RCB batsman in their playoffs history. It was dominant all through. He started off with consecutive boundaries off Avesh Khan in the fifth over and then followed it up by handing Krunal Pandya a 20-run pasting in the next over. His strike-rate never dipped, despite wickets falling around him, bringing up his fifty off just 28 balls. His most severe treatment, though, was reserved for Ravi Bishnoi. KL Rahul's gamble of turning to his wrist-spinner in the 16th over backfired big time, with Patidar smoking 6, 4, 6, 4, 6, and thereby opening the gates to take his team over 200. So how did it start? Well, it started with a drizzle, delaying the start of play by 45 minutes. And then Mohsin Khan produced an absolute jaffa of a delivery in the first over of the game to dismiss the RCB skipper, Faf du Plessis, for a golden duck. RCB and a slight middle-overs wobble Virat Kohli couldn't get going. He was happy to play second-fiddle to Patidar, applauding his assault with some pretty animated fist-pumps, but then fell in the quest to get a move-on himself, for a 24-ball 25, while trying to upper-cut Avesh Khan, only to hole out by the third man boundary. Glenn Maxwell didn't last long either, walking across his stumps to try and manufacture a shot, and heaving a Krunal Pandya dart straight down backward square leg's throat. Lucknow's dropped chances and a DK finish Three dropped catches in four overs sum up how the wheels just fell off the Super Giants in the death overs rather well. Rahul was the first culprit, giving Dinesh Karthik a life at mid-off in the 15th over. Patidar bagged the next two lives, the first a pretty simple chance at deep mid-wicket that Hooda didn't hold on to, and the second at deep backward point, that Manan Vohra misjudged. The repercussions were fatal for LSG as RCB milked 84 off the last five overs. Brief Scores:Royal Challengers Bangalore 207/4 in 20 overs (Rajat Patidar 112*, Dinesh Karthik 37*; Mohsin Khan 1-25) beat Lucknow Super Giants 193/6 in 20 overs (KL Rahul 79, Deepak Hooda 45; Josh Hazlewood 3-43) by 14 runs

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Team Rankings

Rank Team Rating Points
1 India 122 5117
2 Australia 116 3936
3 South Africa 112 3357
4 Pakistan 106 2762
5 New Zealand 101 3349
Rank Player Name Points
1 Babar Azam 824
2 Shubman Gill 801
3 V. Kohli 768
4 H.T. Tector 746
5 R.G. Sharma 746
Rank Player Name Points
1 K.A. Maharaj 716
2 J.R. Hazlewood 688
3 A. Zampa 686
4 Mohammed Siraj 678
5 J.J. Bumrah 665
Rank Player Name Points
1 Mohammad Nabi 320
2 Shakib Al Hasan 292
3 Sikandar Raza 288
4 A. Vala 248
5 Rashid Khan 239
Rank Team Rating Points
1 Australia 124 3715
2 India 120 3108
3 England 105 3151
4 South Africa 103 1845
5 New Zealand 96 2121
Rank Player Name Points
1 K.S. Williamson 859
2 J.E. Root 824
3 D.J. Mitchell 768
4 Babar Azam 768
5 S.P.D. Smith 757
Rank Player Name Points
1 R. Ashwin 870
2 J.J. Bumrah 847
3 J.R. Hazlewood 847
4 K. Rabada 834
5 P.J. Cummins 820
Rank Player Name Points
1 R.A. Jadeja 444
2 R. Ashwin 322
3 Shakib Al Hasan 310
4 J.E. Root 282
5 J.O. Holder 270
Rank Team Rating Points
1 India 266 14108
2 Australia 256 10241
3 England 254 9660
4 West Indies 252 11604
5 South Africa 251 8287
Rank Player Name Points
1 T.M. Head 844
2 S.A. Yadav 842
3 P.D. Salt 816
4 Babar Azam 755
5 Mohammad Rizwan 746
Rank Player Name Points
1 A.U. Rashid 719
2 Rashid Khan 681
3 P.W.H. De Silva 674
4 J.R. Hazlewood 662
5 A.J. Hosein 659
Rank Player Name Points
1 P.W.H. De Silva 222
2 Mohammad Nabi 214
3 H.H. Pandya 213
4 M.P. Stoinis 211
5 Sikandar Raza 210
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