Delhi Daredevils' all-pace attack seemed to have  done enough at the  halfway stage to get their team a much-required  win but Kolkata Knight  Riders showed their  mettle to scrap their way  to an 18- run victory on a two-paced Feroz Shah  Kotla track. Both teams seemed to  have misread the pitch,  packing their sides with  quicks. It was left-arm  spinner Iqbal Abdulla  though who was the  most influential of the  bowlers, spinning his  first ball "like Warne to  Gatting" according to  Brett Lee, as he nipped  out three wickets in a  stifling spell. After Delhi chose to bowl, Irfan Pathan found that  elusive and coveted  inducker to shackle  Kolkata at the start,  Umesh Yadav bowled it  fast and at the batsman's chest to snuff out two  key batsmen in the  middle overs, and even  the much-ridiculed Ajit  Agarkar kept it tight in  the final over. If the usually incisive  and economical Morne  Morkel was Delhi's most  expensive bowler,  Kolkata's best batsman  was not one of their big- money imports, but their local boy, Manoj Tiwary,  who made a combative  half-century to stabilise  the innings. Still, Delhi had a  seemingly below-par  target to chase, and that  was looking even smaller  when Virender Sehwag  was crashing boundaries  at will through the off  side. A murderous blast  over cover followed by a  piledriver past backward  point from Sehwag in the fourth over took Delhi to  28  for 1. Everything changed in  the next two overs.  Abdulla, the first spinner to bowl in the match,  ripped the ball a long  way in the fifth over,  making the ball stop and  nearly had James Hopes  giving a return catch.  Then, Jaidev Unadkat,  who was getting the ball  to jag around, fired in  two bouncers at Sehwag,  the second of which was  top-edged to fine leg. That massive wicket and  the big turn combined to  squeeze the runs, and  only 21  came off the next five overs before Abdulla  had Irfan swiping to Ryan ten Doeschate at  midwicket. With Delhi's  experiment with  Tasmanian batsman  Travis Birt failing, much  depended on Hopes, who  also perished to Abdulla;  ending a patient innings  with a punch to cover in  the 15 th over. Three  balls later, Abdulla had  his third with Naman  Ojha mowing to the  deep, and at 86  for 6  Delhi were out of it. Shah Rukh Khan and the rest in the Kolkata camp  were briefly worried  when Delhi blasted 14  off the 18 th over, though  they were smiling again  as Brett Lee killed off the game with a perfect  penultimate over which  had two runs and two  run-outs. That silenced the Kotla  crowd, which had plenty  to cheer early on as their fast bowlers tied down  Kolkata's heavyweight  batting. Jacques Kallis  was swallowed up in the  fifth over by the  exaggerated inswing  Irfan was extracting and  Gautam Gambhir holed  out against Hopes' no- frills bowling for 18. Tiwary was not at his  most fluent, though he  muscled the odd  boundary to drive  Kolkata ahead. The men  Kolkata expected the big  hits from - Yusuf Pathan  and Eoin Morgan -  perished off successive  deliveries from Umesh to  leave the side at 105  for  5  in 15  overs. Though  only three boundaries  came off the final five  overs, the total  ultimately proved  sufficient. With the win Kolkata  became the fourth team  to occupy second spot in  five days. While there  has been plenty of churn in the middle of the  table, there's been no  change at the top and  bottom for several  rounds, with Delhi  remaining stuck at the  wrong end.
 
 
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