Rashid, Tewatia pull off another final-ball heist for Titans

Cricket

Gujarat Titans 199 for 5 (Saha 68, Tewatia 40*, Rashid 31*, Malik 5-25) beat Sunrisers Hyderabad 195 for 6 (Abhishek 65, Markram 56, Shashank 25*, Shami 3-39) by five wickets

A 21-year old and a 22-year old made the entire world sit up and take notice. Abhishek Sharma carved up Rashid Khan. Umran Malik roughed up Hardik Pandya. The new kids were gunning for the old pros. And it made this game all kinds of breathtaking. The result, if anyone cares, is that Gujarat Titans chased down 196 to beat Sunrisers Hyderabad by five wickets. But honestly, this was way more. This was the IPL at its most vivid, pulse-pounding, heart-breaking best.
Because in the space of 40 overs, we saw the future of Indian cricket and the enduring greatness of one of the very best in T20 cricket. Rashid Khan actually did the unthinkable – twice – bowling his fifth-most expensive ever but then turning around and hitting a six to the game off the very last ball.

Abhishek has come up against Rashid only once before. But that’s in an actual IPL match. Who knows how many times these two had sparred in the Sunrisers nets. And if the events on Wednesday were any indication, they missed out on a massive money-making opportunity. Charging admission to the nets while those two did battle would have raked in puh-lenty because the 21-year old kid kept pwning the greatest legspinner in white-ball cricket.

Rashid ended his night with figures of 4-0-45-0. Abhishek was responsible for 34 of those runs, which came at a strike rate of 226, which is a MASSIVE improvement on the figure (107) left-handers usually manage against the Afghanistan ace in this tournament.

Titans had done their homework. They knew Aiden Markram was going a mere 115 runs per 100 balls of spin this season. They brought Rashid on to counter his threat, but Abhishek’s presence at the other end completely killed the plan. There was even a moment that signalled loud and clear that the youngster was picking the ball out of the hand. In the 15th over, when a ball was dropped short on leg stump, Abhishek didn’t shape to pull but instead made room for himself and straight-bat lofted it over cover because he had seen it was the googly.

That one moment exemplified this whole head-to-head. Rashid Khan was no mystery to Abhishek Sharma.

Shashank Singh is 30 years old. It was already 2019 by the time he made his professional debut. This game is cruel enough. But to start so late…

Except this is the IPL era. There are 10 franchises with tons of scouts whose networks reach the very corners of the country. If you’ve got talent, you’re going to be found.

Shashank strikes at 142 in T20 cricket. He goes nearly run-a-ball even in one-day cricket. He’s a born and raised big hitter. Just needed the stage to show it off. Well, here it was.

Lockie Ferguson ran in to bowl the 20th over and Shashank thumped him for 6, 6 and 6. The first was pure reaction. The ball was full. He drove on the up. Six down the ground. Now the mind games began.

A fast bowler getting hit out of the park usually comes back with a bouncer and Shashank was waiting for it. Boom. Six over midwicket. A fast bowler leaking runs in the last over goes back to basics. And Shashank, yet again, was waiting for it. Boom. Scooped for six over fine leg.

Aiden Markram was supposed to be their pace-hitter, and he was, scoring 56 off 40 balls in a third-wicket partnership that contributed 96 off 61. But the innings that took Sunrisers’ total all the way up to the stratosphere came from a total unknown.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Garcia will take on Anpo in a Dec. 30 exhibition
Temple fires coach Drayton day after OT victory
Dulip Samaraweera handed further 10-year misconduct ban by Cricket Australia
From 13-0 to 1-9: How historically bad has Florida State’s collapse been?
Rusty Embiid can’t help Sixers (2-8) in return

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *