After five defeats in  seven games,  Virender  Sehwag  was desperate for a win. And he wasn't  going to let a dodgy pitch come in his way. Sehwag' s genius demands a  challenge in the limited- overs format, and  particularly in the  shortest version of the  game. Saturday was one  of those occasions when  his batting was pitted  against much more than  the Kochi Tuskers  bowling attack. On a  pitch where a batsman  was dismissed leg before  when the ball zooted on  to his boot in the second  over of the game, Sehwag scripted one of the best  IPL innings, making 80  off 47  deliveries. The  next highest score in the match was 31. Delhi needed some  inspiration to extricate  themselves from the  bottom of the points  table, and there was no  one better than Sehwag  to provide it; especially  after Sreesanth's first  delivery had barely risen  above David Warner's  shin to strike off stump.  Three deliveries later, a  length ball rolled across  the surface to strike  Naman Ojha in front, on  his shoelaces. Sehwag  gritted his teeth at the  non-striker's end and  decided that it was time  for a different approach. "The wicket was not easy  to bat on but I took the  responsibility to bat at  least 15-16  overs. I was  hitting the ball very  nicely but we were losing wickets as well so it was  obvious that I had to bat  a little longer," Sehwag  said. "If wickets would  not have fallen, I could  have gone after the  bowling, but I told myself that if I stayed a little  longer, then we could get to  120-130  which would  be a good total on this  wicket." What he did not reveal  was that he was head  and shoulders above the  others in his possession  of the skill and  determination required  to survive and score on  the unpredictable wicket. He had time to guide  deliveries from off stump  past point, loft inside out against the turn over  extra cover, and pull  deliveries that barely got  up over deep midwicket. Mahela Jayawardene, the Kochi captain,  acknowledged as much. "I think Viru batted very  well, we knew he was  very crucial for their  innings and tried to get  him but the way we  bowled in the last 10  overs, I don't think we  had any control of  things." Sehwag blasted four fours and five sixes off his last  15  deliveries as Delhi  took 94  off the last 7.2  overs to reach 157 , which was way above par on the low wicket. " 130-140  probably would have  been a very competitive  score for us to chase  down, but 160  was a bit  tough," Jayawardene said. "We did not bowl in good  areas at all; we were too  full, we didn't hit the  deck in the last ten overs but we bowled well in  the first ten overs. Viru  batted well. I can't take  anything away from him, but 130  would have been a good score for us to  chase down." Jayawardene said that on such a wicket, the key  was to play as straight as possible, something that  was easier said than  done as Parthiv Patel's  dismissal showed. "You  are never sure when the  low bounce is going to  come so I think the best  way is to bat without  thinking about whether  it is going to stay low. If  it comes low, you can't  control it but just try  and play straight. It's  tough but we have to try and adjust to these  conditions all around,  batsmen and bowlers,  and try to fight it out." Sehwag, who said that  120  would have been a  par total, was delighted  with what Delhi  managed, and told his  bowlers to keep it in good areas and let the wicket  do the rest. "Maybe one  ball would keep low or  another would stop. It is  difficult to chase when  the ball is keeping low.  All my bowlers did a  fantastic job. Whenever I  brought Morne [Morkel]  in, he took a wicket. You  can't expect more from  your bowlers when they  run in every time and  take wickets." Delhi could not have  expected more from their captain as well, who  mastered the conditions  that felled everyone else, including batsmen like  Jayawardene and Brad  Hodge.
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Dear, visitor ! Your comments are precious for us . So, please comment for the improvement of this blog , Thanks.