Mar 21

R Vinay Kumar removed Sachin Tendulkar, Dwayne Bravo and Ambati Rayudu in one over to turn what had been a cat-and-mouse game until then, unmistakably Royal Challengers’ way, also taking them to the top of the table. He benefited in part from the pressure created by his team-mates’ smart swing bowling, changes of pace, bouncers to Indian batsmen, and aggressive spin bowling by Anil Kumble. It was a fitting reversal of roles for a man used to being among the top wicket-takers in Indian domestic cricket, and then watching others steal the spotlight – not the least when his state-mate Abhimanyu Mithun made his international debut ahead of him after just one season of impressive numbers.

There was no role reversal for Jacques Kallis and Manish Pandey, though, who added 50-plus for the first wicket for the third time in a row to scythe through the target without breaking a sweat. Kallis tightened the orange cap around his head, taking his tournament tally to 264 undefeated runs, but Pandey missed a fifty after a good start for the third time in a row.

The Bangalore openers will be the first ones to concede that the night belonged to their bowlers. Praveen Kumar and Dale Steyn laid the foundation by controlling the rampaging batting line-up that had scored 200-plus in both their previous matches. Praveen, with his swing either side in his first over, sent the message that scoring wouldn’t be that easy against this attack, and Steyn in his first removed Sanath Jayasuriya with a quick outswinger.

Match Meter

  • RBC
  • Vinay Kumar strikes thrice: After Mumbai Indians made a decent start, R Vinay Kumar followed Anil Kumble’s strike with three wickets in the 11th over to reduce Mumbai to 76 for 6.

  • RBC MI
  • Pollard gives Bangalore a scare: Kieron Pollard created a semblance of hope for Mumbai when he hit Praveen Kumar for a six and a four in the 17th over.

  • RBC
  • Steyn hits right back: In the 18th over, though, Dale Steyn pulled Mumbai right back by removing both the set batsmen, Pollard and R Sathish.

  • RBC
  • Kallis and Pandey keep going: Jacques Kallis and Manish Pandey once again added more than 50 for the first wicket, at good pace, taking Bangalore to 85 in 9.5 overs, and denying Mumbai even a glance at a comeback.

Advantage Honours even

Then Bangalore resorted to the nasty plan that has worked effectively for them so far: bounce the Indian batsmen out. Aditya Tare square-cut a short delivery from Jacques Kallis immediately before lobbing a sharp bouncer. Saurabh Tiwary – two fifties in two innings before this – managed to muscle a few bouncers away, but never looked in control. Anil Kumble then got him with a loopy googly in the man-versus-boy contest. Vinay followed the bouncer theme, and got Rayudu at the start of that definitive over.

While Bangalore had toyed around with other batsmen until then, at the other end Tendulkar was batting in a sphere of his own. He played the flick shot at will, and manipulated the on-side field, but in nine overs he had faced only 21 deliveries. The 22nd that he faced, he tried to flick again, moved too far across and exposed the leg stump. If this was a slightly lucky wicket for Vinay, there was no luck involved in the pin-point offcutter that removed Bravo two balls later. In 10 balls Mumbai had gone from 71 for 2 to 76 for 6, in 11 overs.

R Sathish and Kieron Pollard had to be circumspect for the next few overs, to make sure they lasted the 20 overs. After a five-over wait, Pollard opened up, hitting Praveen for a six and a four in the 17th over, taking Mumbai to 123. In the 18th, though, Steyn hurt them further. If Pollard was a touch unfortunate in hitting a full toss straight to deep point, the sharp bouncer was too good for Sathish. The running, tumbling catch that Rahul Dravid took at midwicket capped a night of near-perfect fielding.

Praveen, though, provided a blemish on a night of near-perfect bowling, giving Zaheer Khan length balls, which he hit for a six and two fours to take 16 off the last over, but 151 was still going to be hard to defend at a ground that hosted 212 v 208 last weekend.

Not with predictable bowling at any rate. Both Bangalore openers started off cautiously in the first overs from Zaheer and Lasith Malinga. Certain that there was nothing on offer that they couldn’t handle, both of them attacked their second overs. It all went to an expected rhythm when Bravo and Pollard inside the Powerplay, as opposed to Harbhajan Singh. Their slower balls failed to surprise the batsmen, and their regulation pace was cannon fodder. By the end of Powerplay, Bangalore had reached 55. Pandey was 24, and Kallis, on 29, had already set his sights on another asterisk against his score.

Thereafter it was just a stroll in the park for Bangalore, made breezier by some lusty hitting from Robin Uthappa and Virat Kohli.

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written by Swapnil \\ tags: , ,

Mar 18

Tournament heavyweights Delhi Daredevils crashed to a 98-run defeat against an inspired Mumbai Indians outfit that seemed determined to set the lopsided head-to-head record straight and, in the process, went to the top of the points table. Quickfire sixties from Sachin Tendulkar and Saurabh Tiwary took Mumbai to an imposing 218 but a batting line-up capable of overhauling the biggest of targets was bowled out with more than three overs to spare.

Delhi were already handicapped by the loss of Gautam Gambhir to a hamstring pull early in the match so it was up to the middle order to anchor a big chase. But the loss of a steadying hand in Gambhir showed up as the likes of Virender Sehwag and Tillakaratne Dilshan performed well below expectation. The backup for those heavyweights had little time in which to plot and execute a Yusuf Pathan-like counterattack.

Dilshan began the chase on an audacious note by slapping the first ball over mid-off for four. It was an emphatic way to get off the mark after two consecutive ducks, and Delhi motored along at a rate marginally faster than Mumbai after three overs. Mumbai had to dislodge at least one of the opening duo of Dilshan and Virender Sehwag, and the first breakthrough came through Lasith Malinga in the fourth over. After firing it in the blockhole to keep Dilshan under check, he bowled a slower ball and sent the off stump for a spin as the batsman swished at thin air.

The expectations on Sehwag only increased but he was the first victim of double-strike by Dwayne Bravo in the seventh over. Trying to clear long-off, he made contact off the toe-edge of the bat straight down Ambati Rayudu’s throat. Four balls later, AB de Villiers dragged one onto his stumps and the momentum had firmly swung in Mumbai’s favour. A flurry of boundaries by Dinesh Karthik – three in a row – raised some hope, but he too joined the exodus, courtesy a brilliant stumping down the leg side by Aditya Tare. When Manhas perished in the tenth over, Delhi had lost half their side, and with Gambhir indisposed, the match had ceased to be a contest.

Match Meter

  • MI
  • Tendulkar fires: Tendulkar tore into Maharoof with consecutive fours to start an eventful fourth over. Jayasuriya’s wicket was a blip as Tendulkar belted two more fours to make it 17 for the over, the most expensive of the innings

  • MI
  • Tiwary and Rayudu push on: Tendulkar’s departure didn’t hurt Mumbai as the overs 13-15 produced a massive 40. Tiwary and Rayudu combined to hit three sixes and a four to lift the run rate to 11

  • MI
  • Malinga nails countryman Dilshan: The opener looked in ominous form, hitting three boundaries. But he was dismissed in the fourth over for just 17, losing his off stump to a slower ball

  • MI
  • Bravo’s double-strike: The seventh over, by Bravo, left Delhi in deep trouble. Sehwag fell off the first ball and four balls later, de Villiers followed. Delhi slipped to 58 for 3

Advantage Honours even

The pitch was nothing like the minefield which forced the abandonment of the one-dayer between India and Sri Lanka a few months ago. Evenly paced, Tendulkar showed just how easy it was to get to the pitch and pick the gaps with deft touches and delicate clips. It was similar to the way he started his innings in Gwalior, where he scored a memorable 200, squirting the ball past the gaps effortlessly.

Farveez Maharoof’s one-dimensional bowling – overusing the legcutter – made it easier for Tendulkar to plan his shots. After slicing Maharoof past backward point, he made Delhi pay for not placing a slip as he guided the next ball to third man. He then chipped down the track, got inside the line and played a glorious on drive past midwicket to give Delhi some anxious moments.

He brought up his fifty, off just 23 balls, with a paddle to fine leg. Mishra had Tendulkar caught at long-off by the substitute Yogesh Nagar, who was earlier in the news for pulling off a one-handed blinder at mid-off to get rid of Sanath Jayasuriya. Filling in for Gambhir, Nagar had to propel himself backwards a long way but managed to time his leap to perfection.

Significantly, Tiwary and Rayudu didn’t allow things to drift after Tendulkar departed. The over after his dismissal went for just three but the pair ensured they picked at least one boundary in every over during their 71-run stand, in just short of seven overs. If Tendulkar was all nonchalance, Tiwary and Rayudu were all about brute power. Tiwary employed the slog sweep against the spinners, staying in the crease and muscling three sixes. Rayudu used his feet a lot more, regularly chipping down the track to clear the rope. Mishra tried firing it flatter and shorter with the hope of getting the ball to shoot through but the batsmen were alert enough to slap them away.

By the time Delhi dislodged the pair, Mumbai were already on 193 with a little more than two overs left. Promoting Tiwary and Rayudu over the two West Indians – Bravo and Pollard – had proved to be a productive move. The Caribbean duo combined to push the score to 218 – the highest in this tournament so far – which was more than enough to stamp their dominance.

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written by Swapnil \\ tags: , ,

Mar 14

The second-fastest Twenty20 hundred, a 37-ball assault from Yusuf Pathan, as delicate as it was brutal, wasn’t enough on a day in which precious little was contributed by the other Rajasthan Royals players. Despite Mumbai Indians piling on their biggest score in the IPL, it required special death bowling from Zaheer Khan and Lasith Malinga to deny Rajasthan 19 runs in the last two overs.

Yusuf’s onslaught came after Mumbai’s youngsters Ambati Rayudu, considered unlucky to have not played for India yet, and Saurabh Tiwary powered the home side to what seemed a massive total, but it turned out to be one that just about dodged the Yusuf-shaped bullet.

The it’s-good-to-be-back ad campaign of the IPL could well have been meant exclusively for Yusuf. In his first innings back in India, he shook a dying match up and gave Mumbai a right scare. The Yusuf show began when Rajasthan needed 143 off 57. He scored 54 off the next 11 balls he faced, 26 other deliveries got him 46, and when he finally got out he left Rajasthan 40 to get off 17 deliveries.

Of the nine fours and eight sixes he hit in a frenetic period of play, three shots stood out – and they were not sixes. The length deliveries and full tosses were all murdered, but in the 13th over – he was 57 off 22 by then – Ryan McLaren bowled a decent enough yorker to him. Yusuf opened the face late, beautifully late, and guided it for four. The next ball was not more than a couple of inches short of being a yorker, but on the stumps, and he managed to get under it, and still hit it to long-off for four. The third yorker of the over was neither wide nor straight, in between, and he leaned back to make space and steered it even later than the one before. More brutal hits preceded a moment of inspiration for Mumbai.

Arguably the best fielder in India, R Satish, returning from ICL, followed up his direct-hit run-out and a terrific caught-and-bowled with Yusuf’s dismissal. He bowled full and straight to Paras Dogra, the other batsman, then dived in his follow through to field the ball, and reverse-flicked to catch a backing-up Yusuf short.

Dogra, who had scored 18 off 20 in the 107-run stand until then, opened up in the same over, and hit two fours and two sixes to bring down the target to 19 off 12.

Zaheer and Malinga, though, with Harbhajan Singh injured and not available to bowl, performed like champs. Eleven near-yorkers from the duo in the last two overs meant even the two wides they bowled were not enough for Rajasthan.

Match Meter

  • MI RR
  • An action-packed beginning: Sanath Jayasuriya and Sachin Tendulkar started off purposefully, followed by Aditya Tare’s quick cameo. Rajasthan Royals, though, came back to take three wickets in three overs to reduce Mumbai Indians to 70 for 3 in 6.3 overs.

  • MI
  • Youngsters to the fore: Ambati Rayudu and Saurabh Tiwary added 110 runs in 63 balls to help Mumbai recover from the triple-strike. Both of them lashed stroke-filled half-centuries to power Mumbai to their highest total.

  • MI
  • Fantastic fielding: Defending 212, Mumbai fielders and bowlers were on the top of their games, never letting Rajasthan even think of an improbable win. After 10 overs, Rajasthan were 69 for 4.

  • RR
  • Yusuf goes berserk: Yusuf Pathan unleashed an assault, as delicate as it was brutal, hitting nine fours and eight-sixes in a 37-ball hundred. From needing 143 off 57, Yusuf brought them down to needing 40 off 17.

  • MI
  • Mumbai hold nerve: R Sathish came up with a superb bowling-and-fielding effort to get rid of Yusuf, and Lasith Malinga and Zaheer Khan bowled two yorker-filled overs to deny Rajasthan 19 runs in the last two overs.

Advantage Honours even

It was fitting for Mumbai that Indian cricketers helped them come back at crucial times: they had become the first team in the three seasons of IPL to play with only three overseas players. Kapil Dev and friends could afford a wee smile too. Rayudu, Sathish and Ali Murtaza – who took a wicket with his first ball – are all returning from the ICL.

Rayudu and Tiwary added 110 runs in 63 balls to help Mumbai Indians recover from a triple-strike in the first third of the innings. Shane Warne didn’t have to wait too long to find out if Tendulkar “will open and face [Shaun] Tait”, with Tendulkar walking out to open with Sanath Jayasuriya.

Jayasuriya took apart Dimitri Mascarenhas, and Tendulkar did the honours for Tait, taking 10 runs from the four balls that Tait bowled to him. Mascarenhas hit back with two wickets in one over, and at 70 for 3 in 6.3 overs, the onus was on the Indian batsmen.

Rayudu immediately showed glimpses of what made observers talk of him as a potential international. He wristily flicked the first ball he faced for four, lest anybody forget he’s from Hyderabad.

It was just as well that Tendulkar didn’t survive long enough to give the viewers the much-awaited contest against Warne: the latter was off colour, going for 29 runs in three overs. There was no turn for Warne, and he bowled too many half-volleys. Tiwary took full toll, and hit him down the ground for two fours and a six. By the time Warne took himself off, Mumbai had reached 121 in 12 overs. Tiwary had reached 26, and Rayudu 23, off 17 balls each.

Part-time offbreaks from Abhishek Jhunjhunwala and Yusuf went for full-time hitting. Rayudu hit three successive Jhunjhunwala deliveries for a huge six and fours either side of long-on. When he next smacked a six off Yusuf, he had reached 53 off just 30 deliveries, and Mumbai had rocketed to 166 in 16.3.

Tiwary reached his fifty by hitting Amit Uniyal, whose change-up delivery was the quicker one, to the long-on boundary. In fact it was all clean hitting down the ground from the two: out of the 108 they scored between them, only 16 came behind square.

Rayudu and Tiwary didn’t see the innings to the close, but Harbhajan Singh and Ryan McLaren contributed to Tait’s horror day, taking 22 off his last two overs. Each one of those runs mattered in the end.

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written by Swapnil \\ tags: , ,

Mar 11

They are owned by the richest Indian in the world. They are led by the best cricketer of this generation. They have one of the best fast bowlers in their ranks. But Mumbai Indians, despite their high profile, failed to reach the knockout phase in the IPL’s two editions thus far.

An array of reasons can be cited behind for their struggle: In the first season, Mumbai did well to hold together after the Harbhajan Singh slapping incident. But what hurt them the most was the absence of Sachin Tendulkar from the first half of the tournament due to injury. There was also plenty of chopping and changing of the line-ups, and the inexperience of the domestic players was apparent on more than one occasion despite Tendulkar and Shaun Pollock’s best efforts to inspire the team through their leadership.

In 2009, Zaheer Khan was bought from Royal Challengers Bangalore, adding strength to the bowling department. Zaheer also filled the spot vacated by Pollock, who took up the role of mentor. Jonty Rhodes added vitality to the training sessions with his agility and reflexes. JP Duminy was signed up for a whopping US$950,000 after his heroics in Australia, but, on home soil, was unable to finish off games or give that final thrust to innings when left on his own. It did not help that Zaheer injured himself in the field midway through the tournament, and Sanath Jayasuriya failed to provide the usual fireworks in the beginning. Mumbai ended on the second rung from the bottom.

But things look more positive the third time around. Tendulkar is in tremendous form with the bat and even if he is yet not a formidable batsman in Twenty20 cricket, the defining innings doesn’t seem far. Mumbai’s middle order is bolstered by the presence of the Trinidad pair of Dwayne Bravo and Kieron Pollard, both supremely athletic allrounders having the ability to win games on their own. Zaheer is currently among the most consistent fast bowlers and if he is well backed-up by Lasith Malinga, with Jayasuriya firing at the top with Tendulkar, Mumbai can bounce back.

The buzz

The blue on the jersey has been shaded to a darker tone. The inspiration behind the new design was the state-of-the-art Bandra-Worli sea-link, which connects the northern suburbs to south of Mumbai. The idea was to create a design that would not only be new, but also resemble the enterprise and growth of Mumbai – the golden stripes across the bust of the shirt depicts the two pillars of the sea-link and the blue is the shade of the Arabian sea. The team has also found support from sponsors, whose count has increased to 14, five more than last year.

Another first is the sale of wrist bands in the Mumbai colours, autographed by Tendulkar, the proceeds of which will be passed over to provide education for underprivileged kids supported by five NGOs.

New faces

Mumbai stamped their authority as the richest franchise in the League, bagging Kieron Pollard in the silent tie-breaker for an undisclosed sum, rumoured to be as high as that of the richest players in the IPL. Robin Singh leads a new coaching set-up, with Paras Mhambrey as his deputy. The pair did not waste time in picking few of the best players from the unofficial Indian Cricket League – Ambati Rayudu and R Sateesh, Rahul Shukla, Ishan Malhotra, Ali Murtaza, and Aditya Tare have been fast-tracked into the primary squad.

Watch out for

Sachin Tendulkar. He is in stupendous form and will be hungry to prove his worth in a format he hasn’t dominated.

Missing in action

The Caribbean pair of Bravo and Pollard would be absent in the opener against Rajasthan Royals, for they will be wrapping up the ODI series against Zimbabwe, which ends on March 14.

X-factor

Pollard can provide the firepower lower down the order, something Mumbai expected from Duminy last year

Strength

A formidable batting order: Tendulkar, Jayasuriya, Shikar Dhawan, Bravo, Pollard and Abhishek Nayar.

Weakness

Barring Zaheer , the rest of the fast bowling department, including Malinga, have been inconsistent. But Zaheer, who has been the Indian bowling captain for the last two years, has the ability to hold the attack together, and along with Harbhajan in the middle overs, can lead the rest of the pack in the right direction.

IPL 2009 – the key figures

Final position: Seventh

Top scorer: JP Duminy with 372 runs at 41.33 and strike-rate of 114.46

Top wicket-taker: Lasith Malinga with 18 wickets at 17.33 and economy-rate of 6.33

Best result: Eight-wicket win over Punjab

Worst result: Nine-wicket defeat to Bangalore

Highest team score: 187 for 6 v Kolkata

Lowest team score: 116 v Delhi

Prediction for 2010

Mumbai have the ability to make the semi-finals, but a return to the spot they ended at in 2008 is more realistic.

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written by Swapnil \\ tags: ,

May 25

Here are the points table of Indian Premier League twenty20 2009 involving Chennai Super Kings, Delhi Daredevils, Kings XI Punjab, Rajasthan Royals, Mumbai Indians, Kolkata Knight Riders, Bangalore Royal Challengers and Deccan Chargers.

There will be total 56 league matches will be played before top four teams will qualify for semi finals. Each team will play with each other twice that mean each team will play total number of 14 matches. Top Four teams with most number of wins will qualify for 1st and 2nd semi finals. Finals of IPL twenty20 2009 will be played on 24th of May 2009 at Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg.

 

Teams

P

W

L

N/R

Points

NRR

Delhi Daredevils

14

10

4

0

20

+0.31

Chennai Super Kings

14

8

5

1

17

+0.95

Bangalore Royal Challengers

14

8

6

0

16

-0.19

Deccan Chargers

14

7

7

0

14

+0.20

Kings XI Punjab

14

7

7

0

14

-0.48

Rajasthan Royals

14

6

7

1

13

-0.35

Mumbai Indians

14

5

8

1

11

+0.30

Kolkata Knight Riders

14

3

10

1

7

-0.79

Here are the fixtures and results of IPL twenty20:

Timing

Teams

Venue

Result

Sat 18 Apr

16:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Chennai Super Kings

Newlands, Cape Town

 

Mumbai Indians beat CSK by 19 runs

Sat 18 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Royal Challengers Bangalore

Newlands, Cape Town

 

Royal Challengers Bangalore beat Rajasthan Royals by 75 runs

Sun 19 Apr

16:00 PM

King XI Punjab v Delhi Daredevils

Newlands, Cape Town

 

Delhi Daredevils beat Kings XI Punjab by 10 Wickets

Sun 19 Apr (D/N)20:00 PM

 

Kolkata Knight Riders v Deccan Chargers

Newlands, Cape Town

Deccan Chargers beat Kolkata Knight Riders by 8 Wickets

Mon 20 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Royal Challengers Bangalore v Chennai Super Kings

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

 

Chennai Super Kings beat Royal Challengers Bangalore by 92 runs

Tue 21 Apr

16:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Kings XI Punjab

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Kolkata Knight Riders beat Kings XI Punjab by 11 runs (D/L Method)

Tue 21 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Mumbai Indians

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Match Abandoned due to Rain

Wed 22 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Deccan Chargers Hyderabad v Royal Challengers Bangalore

Newlands, Cape Town

Deccan Chargers beat Royal Challengers by 24 Runs

Wed 23 Apr

16:00 PM

Delhi Daredevils v Chennai Super Kings

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Delhi Daredevils won by 9 runs

Thu 23 Apr(D/N)

20:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Rajasthan Royals

Newlands, Cape Town

Rajasthan Royals won Via Super Over

Fri 24 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Royal Challengers Bangalore

Kingsmead, Durban

Kings XI Punjab won by 7 Wickets

Sat 25 Apr

16:00 PM

Deccan Chargers v Mumbai Indians

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Deccan Chargers won by 12 Runs

Sat 25 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Chennai Super Kings

Newlands, Cape Town

 

Match Abandoned due to Rain

Sun 26 Apr

16:00 PM

Royal Challengers Bangalore v Delhi Daredevils

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

 

Delhi Daredevils won by 6 Wickets

Sun 26 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Kings XI Punjab

Newlands, Cape Town

 

Kings XI Punjab won by 27 Runs

Mon 27 Apr

16:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Deccan Chargers Hyderabad

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Deccan Chargers won by 6 Wickets

Mon 27 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Mumbai Indians

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

Mumbai Indians won by 92 Runs

Tue 28 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Delhi Daredevils

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Rajasthan Royals won by 5 Wickets

Wed 29 Apr

16:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Royal Challengers Bangalore

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Bangalore Royal Challengers won by 5 Wickets

Wed 29 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Kings XI Punjab

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Kings XI Punjab won by 3 Runs

Thu 30 Apr

16:00 PM

Delhi Daredevils v Deccan Chargers

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Delhi Daredevils won by 6 Wickets

Thu 30 Apr (D/N)

20:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Rajasthan Royals

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Chennai Super Kings won by 38 Runs

Fri 1 May

16:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Kolkata Knight Riders

Buffalo Park, East London

 

Mumbai Indians won by 9 Runs

Fri 1 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Royal Challengers Bangalore

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Bangalore Royal Challengers won by 8 Runs

Sat 2 May

16:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Deccan Chargers

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

 

Rajasthan Royals Won by 3 Wickets

Sat 2 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Delhi Daredevils

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

 

Chennai Super Kings Won by 18 Runs

Sun 3 May

16:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Kolkata Knight Riders

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

Kings XI Punjab won by 6 Wickets

 

Sun 3 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Royal Challengers Bangalore

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 9 Wickets

Mon 4 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Deccan Chargers

Buffalo Park, East London

 

Chennai Super Kings Won by 78 Runs

Tue 5 May

16:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Rajasthan Royals

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Rajasthan Royals won by 78 Runs

Tue 5 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Delhi Daredevils v Kolkata Knight Riders

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Delhi Daredevils Won by 9 Wickets

Wed 6 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Deccan Chargers

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Deccan Chargers won by 19 Runs

Thu 7 May

16:00 PM

Royal Challengers Bangalore v Rajasthan Royals

SuperSport Park, Centurion

Rajasthan Royals won by 7 Wickets

Thu 7 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Chennai Super Kings

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Chennai Super Kings Won by 12 Runs

Fri 8 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Delhi Daredevils

Buffalo Park, East London

 

Delhi Daredevils Won by 7 Wickets

Sat 9 May

16:00 PM

Deccan Chargers v Kings XI Punjab

De Beers Diamond Oval, Kimberley

 

Kings XI Punjab won by 3 Wickets

Sat 9 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Rajasthan Royals

De Beers Diamond Oval, Kimberley

 

Chennai Super Kings won by 7 Wickets

Sun 10 May

16:00 PM

Royal Challengers Bangalore v Mumbai Indians

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

 

Mumbai Indians Won by 16 Runs

Sun 10 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Delhi Daredevils

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

 

Delhi Daredevils won by 7 Wickets

Mon 11 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Deccan Chargers

De Beers Diamond Oval, Kimberley

 

Deccan Chargers won by 53 Runs

Tue 12 May

16:00 PM

Kolkata Knight Riders v Royal Challengers Bangalore

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 6 Wickets

Tue 12 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Mumbai Indians

SuperSport Park, Centurion

Mumbai Indians won by 8 Wickets

Wed 13 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Deccan Chargers v Delhi Daredevils

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Delhi Daredevils Won by 12 Runs

Thu 14 May

16:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Royal Challengers Bangalore

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 2 Wickets

Thu 14 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Rajasthan Royals

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Rajasthan Royals Won by 2 Runs

Fri 15 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Delhi Daredevils

OUTsurance Oval, Bloemfontein

Kings XI Punjab won by 6 Wickets

Sat 16 May

16:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Mumbai Indians

St George’s Park, Port Elizabeth

Chennai Super Kings Won by 7 Wickets

Sat 16 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Deccan Chargers v Kolkata Knight Riders

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

 

Deccan Chargers won by 6 Wickets

Sun 17 May

16:00 PM

Kings XI Punjab v Deccan Chargers

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

 

Kings XI Punjab won by 1 Run

Sun 17 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Delhi Daredevils v Rajasthan Royals

OUTsurance Oval, Bloemfontein

Delhi Daredevils won by 14 Runs

Mon 18 May(D/N)

20:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Kolkata Knight Riders

SuperSport Park, Centurion

Kolkata Knight Riders Won by 7 Wickets

Tue 19 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Delhi Daredevils v Royal Challengers Bangalore

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 7 Wickets

Wed 20 May

16:00 PM

Rajasthan Royals v Kolkata Knight Riders

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Kolkata Knight Riders won by 4 Wickets

Wed 20 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Chennai Super Kings v Kings XI Punjab

Kingsmead, Durban

 

Chennai Super Kings won by 24 Runs

 

Thu 21 May

16:00 PM

Mumbai Indians v Delhi Daredevils

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Delhi Daredevils Won by 4 Wickets

Thu 21 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Deccan Chargers v Royal Challengers Bangalore

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 12 Runs

Fri 22 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

1st Semi-Final – Delhi Daredevils v Deccan Chargers

SuperSport Park, Centurion

 

Deccan Chargers Won by 6 Wickets

Sat 23 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

2nd Semi-Final – Royal Challengers Bangalore v Chennai Super Kings

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

 

Royal Challengers Bangalore Won by 6 Wickets

Sun 24 May (D/N)

20:00 PM

Final – Royal Challengers Bangalore v Deccan Chargers

New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg

 

Deccan Chargers beat Royal Challengers Bangalore by 6Runs to become IPL 2009 Champion

source: cricketvillage.blogspot.com

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written by Swapnil \\ tags: , , , , , ,

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