If you needed a punctuation mark  to describe this game, you'd  choose a big, bold exclamation  mark and colour it a deep crimson  red. Kochi Tuskers Kerala's  scorecard was stunningly woeful  at the end of four sensational  overs: 0 , 4 , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0  were the  scores of the batsmen sucker- punched by Ishant Sharma, who  harassed them with seam and  bounce. And Kochi never recovered from that soul-crushing spell. His hair bobbed up and down in  characteristic fashion as Ishant ran in, fingers behind the seam and  wrists snapping at the release,  and the length was nearly always  full. The first has been an ever- present theme with him in good  and bad times, the second image  hasn't always been consistently  repeated, and the third was a  pleasant surprise. Ishant entered the scene after  Dale Steyn took out Brendon  McCullum in the first over with a  delivery that jagged away to take the outside edge. It was the  beginning of Kochi's nightmare as  Ishant stunned them with a triple  strike. Parthiv Patel stabbed at a  delivery that bounced and seamed away from him to the keeper,  Raiphi Gomez (what was he doing  at No. 4 ?) was taken out for a  first-ball duck by a sharp incutter,  and Brad Hodge combusted off the fifth delivery. He played a loose  and ambitious off drive, wafting  outside the line of the full  delivery that cut in to rearrange  the furniture. Kochi were 2  for 4  then and all  their hopes rested on their opener and captain Mahela Jayawardene,  who was a forlorn figure in the  middle, watching the destruction  unfold in front of him. Ishant  wasn't done yet; he reserved his  best for Jayawardene. After  trapping Kedar Jadhav in front  with a sharp incutter in the fourth over, he produced a brute of a  delivery to knock out  Jayawardene, and Kochi, in the  same over. It screamed up from  back of a good length, held its line and kissed the edge of the  defensive prod en route to the  delighted Kumar Sangakkara.  Jayawardene gave an inquisitive,  and accusing, look at the pitch  before he turned and departed  the crime scene. Ishant's figures read an incredible  5  for 6  and Kochi were 11  for 6  from four overs, and though there were a couple of face-saving  contributions from Ravindra Jadeja and Thisara Perera, they were  rapidly heading along a cul-de-sac. In retrospect, the middle-over  massacre led by Sangakkara -  Deccan recovered from the depths of 37  for 3  after 10  overs to reach 105  for 3  in 16 -  lulled one into a  false perception about the nature  of the track. In hindsight, Kochi  will be ruing a no-ball from  Sreesanth that allowed  Sangakkara to break free.  Sangakkara was on 5  when  Sreesanth produced a jaffa - it  bent back in from the off stump  line to knock out the middle stump - but the third umpire confirmed  the on-field umpire's suspicion  that it was a no-ball. It was the 11 th over, bowled by  Perera, that changed the  landscape. Both Sangakkara and  Cameron White, who was on 6  from 17  balls, pulled two short  deliveries to the boundary to take 11  runs in that over. It wasn't  your massive "big over" that the  IPL throws up on a daily basis but  it was the spark that ignited  Deccan, and Sangakkara in  particular. In the 12 th over, he  dragged Vinay Kumar for two leg- side boundaries and threw in the  conventional and the upper cut to  collect two more fours in the 14 th  over, off Perera. He continued to  slash and heave and even unfurled a paddle-swept boundary off  Sreesanth but the next over over  from Vinay brought Kochi back. Vinay had White holing out to  deep midwicket off the fifth  delivery and induced Sangakkara  to edge a slower one off the next. The lower order couldn't produce  anything substantial and the  question lingered at the end of  their innings: Was 129  going to be  enough? Ishant answered it in  some style.
 
 
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