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How Rishabh Pant almost nailed his T20 World Cup spot with a blinder

The 43-ball 88 not out not only set DC a lofty total but put him favorite to keep the wickets for his country in the global tournament.

Rishabh pantDelhi Capitals’ captain Rishabh Pant plays a shot during an Indian Premier League (IPL) 2024 T20 cricket match between Delhi Capitals and Gujarat Titans, at the Arun Jaitley Stadium, in New Delhi, Wednesday, April 24, 2024. (PTI Photo)

Synopsis: Axar and Pant stitch a vital stand and the latter takes the game deep, a speciality of Gujarat. On this night though, Miller and Rashid fail to close it late.

Pant-Axar show how it’s done

A different strip was used at Kotla for this game. There was no sign of grass, it was nothing like the belter that had hosted Sunrisers Hyderabad’s bashing of the hosts. Rishabh Pant, who calls the venue a virtual home, had hinted towards it at the toss. “It’s more on the slower side than the last game.” Axar Patel had put it in his own words after a 43-ball outing. “Thoda fass raha tha.” There were runs in the offering, but they called for more application from the batters. In the end, it was Pant and Axar, who read it best and stabilised the innings after Delhi’s top-order – minus David Warner – mistimed their way back to the dressing room.

It was against the Afghan spin duo of Rashid Khan and Noor Ahmad, that the two started ticking on their way to a hundred-plus stand. It was a stern test with the two wrist-spinners being the mirror images of each other. But the two DC left-handers had done their homework and looked flawless as they kept the flow of boundaries strong through the middle overs phase. It was a partnership in every sense of the word, with the two feeding off of each other’s success.

If Axar picked the wrong ‘un from Rashid with a slog sweep over mid wicket, Pant was equally comfortable as he made room on the off-side to meet Noor’s googly with a paddle shot down fine leg for four. Off Rashid’s next, both the southpaws split the field on the leg side for a boundary each as the leggie dragged back his length. The pull in particular was the go-to shot for the two as the ball took its time to come onto the bat.

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With the introduction of Mohit Sharma in the second half of the innings, the off-pace deliveries became regular. If Pant scythed an angled-away delivery down deep backward point off the pacer in one over, Axar matched it by rocking back in his crease off the spinner and manufacturing a cut shot of his own. Picking up the pace in the death overs, Pant smeared a couple of sixes off Mohit before Axar hammered back-to-back maximums off Noor. His attempt at a third led to a breakthrough for Gujarat but brought no respite as the Delhi skipper taped into his finisher self.

It’s a role India’s cricket loyalists have envisioned Pant take on since he announced his arrival on the big stage. His use of the crease coupled with a range of unorthodox shots lends him an apt arsenal to do so. But for one reason or another, it hasn’t happened. With a wicketkeeper-batter spot left ripe for the taking at this summer’s T20 World Cup though, Pant’s shift of gears on Wednesday couldn’t have been better timed.

Against Mohit Sharma, he unfurled the shot of the night—a hoick in front of square, hanging back in his crease, off a length ball. In the final over though, Pant would rip into Gujarat’s designated death bowler with disdain – brandishing four sixes and a four.

Festive offer

“The plan was to take the game deep,” Axar would concede at the halfway-stage. It’s an act their opposition have carved their reputation from. It’s an act they almost pulled off on Wednesday.

GT almost close it

When Pant held onto Rahul Tewatia’s outside edge off Kuldeep Yadav, Delhi had every right to feel they were the favorites. 72 runs were required with just four overs. David Miller, despite his reputation, hadn’t fired this season. He’d break the shackles next over, plundering 24 off Anrich Nortje.

Clearing his front leg off the first ball – a 146.5KPH good length delivery on the stumps – Miller rammed it down mid-wicket for four. The Proteas speedster amped up the pace off the next one and his national teammate looked as if he’d anticipated the move. 150 clicks, a tad fuller, and the southpaw creamed it through the line over extra cover for six. For the quintessential short ball, Miller stood his ground to fashion a pull shot. But it was the one he hit down the ground that took the cake. Just a gentle push with the bat’s trajectory as straight as it gets. A 21-ball fifty and the equation was now down to 48 off the last three. But he holed one to deep square leg in the next over.

In came the newly-appointed Tamil Nadu skipper Sai Kishore, who had stepped up with the ball a few nights back. The 27-year-old dealt back-to-back sixes off Rasikh Dar Salam before bowing out on the final ball of the penultimate over.

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With 19 required off the final over, there was a reason to worry for the home side. Rashid Khan held the strike. The Afghan spinner had starred with the bat before for the two-time finalists. And when he stabbed back-to-back fours off Mukesh Kumar’s first two deliveries, it seemed as if Gujarat were closing down another game right down the wire. Even after a couple of dot balls, he kept the game alive with a six. A four would have stretched the game to the Super Over. It wasn’t to be, as Mukesh nailed a yorker and Rashid couldn’t get the bat underneath it.

Brief Scores: Delhi Capitals 224 for 4 (Pant 88*, Axar 66, Warrier 3-15) beat Gujarat Titans 220 for 8 (Sai Sudharsan 65, Miller 55, Salam 3-44) by four runs.

Get latest updates on IPL 2024 from IPL Points Table to Teams, Schedule, Most Runs and Most Wickets along with live score updates for all matches. Also get Sports news and more cricket updates.

First uploaded on: 25-04-2024 at 00:22 IST
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