Kochi Tuskers Kerala won a battle of attrition against Kolkata Knight Riders on a slow Eden Gardens pitch that aided the spinners. The six-run win was their third on the trot and took them to third position in the points table. The wicket did not play as low as it did in Kolkata’s win against Rajasthan Royals, but it was just as slow, making it difficult for batsmen, and a delight for the spinners.
After Yusuf Pathan and Shakib Al Hasan had taken six wickets for 48 runs between them to restrict Kochi to 132, Kolkata’s powerful batting line-up would have fancied the modest chase. But Kochi’s own army of spinners – Muttiah Muralitharan, Ramesh Powar and Ravindra Jadeja – stifled the runs though they did not get as many wickets, and ensured the pressure got to the Kolkata batsmen.
Ironically, in a game dominated by spin, Kolkata paid the price for losing wickets to the fast bowlers at the start, whereas Kochi did not. Kolkata’s seamers conceded 26 for 0 in their first three overs, while Kochi’s fast bowlers dismissed Jacques Kallis and Gautam Gambhir and conceded only 20 runs in the first four overs.
Kallis fell to the hook for the second time running; he had fallen to a topedge against Rajasthan; he swung Vinay Kumar straight to deep square leg today. Gambhir played inside the line of an RP Singh full delivery that straightened and uprooted middle stump as Kolkata slipped to 27 for 2.
In the next over, Manvinder Bisla drove outside the line of a Jadeja delivery to lose his off stump. Manoj Tiwary and Eoin Morgan tried to work the ball around but the spinners were getting turn, and their different styles posed problems. Muralitharan, back after being left out for the previous two games, varied his flight and angle brilliantly, Jadeja fired the ball in, and Powar continued to flight it generously in a format where he should supposedly be an extinct commodity.
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