Playing catch-up from the outset after openers Ryan Rickelton and Will Jacks fell in the space of four deliveries within three overs, Naman Dhir and Suryakumar Yadav’s quick-fire partnership (69 of 35) helped MI catch up with LSG’s scoring rates midway through the innings. However, Suryakumar’s untimely dismissal in the 17th, trying to pull off an audacious swipe off seamer Avesh Khan from outside the off-stump, marked MI’s downward spiral with a victory in sight.
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Breaking a Lucknow jinx
Mitchell Marsh was pranked twice at the Ekana on April Fools’ Day. His only two previous outings at the venue on the day, two years ago and earlier this week, had him trudging back bearing ducks. The 33-year-old’s first steps at the strip on Friday were watchfully curated, hanging put in the crease to drag Trent Boult across for two runs that offered relief and release at the home base of his new IPL franchise.
A crisp straight drive two balls later oozed abundant confidence, so much so that neither Boult nor his teammates picked up the faint under-edge as the ball jagged away past Marsh’s controlled reach.
But the LSG dip begins in the middle-overs. Marsh did not bother to test the extended square boundaries for the match with men on patrol, offering a leading edge to wrist-spinner Vignesh Puthur’s warm-up googly back to the bowler himself.
Captains’ contrast
A recurring theme of all four outings now, Lucknow’s batting impetus beats a different rhythm when Marsh or the menacing Nicholas Pooran are around. Sensing his battle, captain Pandya stepped up with his characteristic, almost annoying short-length jabs that can be off-putting for batters who have built a routine of bashing truer balls on belters. The off-cutter hopping away worked like a charm as Pooran’s sloppy pull ballooned to the short fine-leg fielder.
With a power figure in Rohit Sharma missing due to the Impact Sub set-up or a supposed knee injury this time, Pandya’s rising unilateral figure at MI has demanded as much skill as tactical nous when on the field. While the all-rounder came to the fore, seizing a cleverly crafted maiden five-wicket haul – a first by an IPL skipper – on the might of his staple back-of-the-length off-cutters, Pandya’s counterpart had another forgettable night.
Rishabh Pant walking back after getting out. (Agencies)In his four-match old LSG jersey, Rishabh Pant has walked into a rut that Pandya had found himself in upon return to MI last year. In his godsend moment to impress his captain, substitute Corbin Bosch hung on to a one-hander with a stunning waltz from mid-off, making Pant’s poke at Pandya’s pace-off delivery look all the more miserable.
The growing pattern will worry Pant and the LSG camp, with the southpaw losing shape, timing and muscle on four strokes that have plotted his dismissal around the turf in successive matches. With results blowing hot and cold (two wins and as many losses), Pant the batter will be desperate for a reset and hope his striking zones spring back before it’s too late, just like his team’s Friday rearguard.
Brief Scores: Lucknow Super Giants 203 for 8 (Marsh 60, Markram 53, Hardik 5-36) beat Mumbai Indians 191 for 5 (Suryakumar 67, Dhir 46, Rathi 1-21) by 12 runs