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Team Standings


MP W L NR RR P
Delhi 12 9 3 0 +0.31 18
Chennai 13 7 5 1 +0.93 15
Hyderabad 13 7 6 0 +0.27 14
Punjab 13 7 6 0 -0.42 14
Rajasthan 13 6 6 1 -0.36 13
Bangalore 12 6 6 0 -0.31 12
Mumbai 13 5 7 1 +0.40 11

West Indies tour of England, 2009

Fixtures

May 2009
Wed 6 - Sun 10 11:00 local, 10:00 GMT
1st Test - England v
West Indies Lord's, London
Thu 14 - Mon 18 11:00 local, 10:00 GMT
2nd Test - England v West Indies Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street

Thu 21 10:45 local, 09:45 GMT
1st ODI - England v West Indies Headingley, Leeds
Sun 24 10:45 local, 09:45 GMT
2nd ODI - England v West Indies County Ground,
Tue 26 10:45 local, 09:45 GMT
3rd ODI - England v West Indies Edgbaston, Birmingham

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Cool Rajasthan take humdinger

Mumbai Indians v Rajasthan Royals, IPL, Durban

The Bulletin by Shwe Wai

Rajasthan Royals 145 for 7 (Quiney 51, Jadeja 42, Jayasuriya 2-3) beat Mumbai Indians 143 (Tendulkar 40, Nayar 35, Warne 3-24) by two runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out



Shane Warne is charged up after dismissing Sachin Tendulkar, Mumbai Indians v Rajasthan Royals, 45th match, IPL, Durban, May 14, 2009
Shane Warne got the all-important wicket of Sachin Tendulkar when the match was slipping away from Rajasthan

The spectators at Kingsmead were treated to yet another humdinger as the Rajasthan Royals prevailed by two runs in a see-saw encounter with the Mumbai Indians. Rajasthan were in control of the game for 14 overs before Sachin Tendulkar and Abhishek Nayar opened out and gave Mumbai hope. It all came down to the final over when Mumbai needed four runs but a combination of some incredible death bowling by Munaf Patel and panic running resulted in three wickets, incredible scenes and a third-place spot for Rajasthan.

When Nayar made room and lofted Johan Botha over deep extra cover in the penultimate over, Mumbai - who battled required rates crossing nine an over - suddenly needed six off nine deliveries. The following delivery, Nayar played all around a yorker, lost sight of the ball and ambled out of his crease, only to be run out by the keeper. The dismissal was as untimely as Mumbai's revival, which came a little too late and resulted in a last-minute scramble for the required runs.

Munaf had leaked 14 off his previous over but Warne was brave enough to toss the ball back to him for the final over. Munaf beat Dhawal Kulkarni off the first ball and then slipped in a yorker to trap him lbw. Chetanya Nanda pushed the third, a full toss, to mid-off but perished to a direct hit. That put Harbhajan Singh back on strike but he could only squeeze a single off the next ball. Three were needed off two balls when Lasith Malinga took strike but yet another suicidal single, this time to cover, closed out the match.

It took a good 15 overs for the chase to actually come alive. Mumbai were kept on a tight leash by some excellent restrictive bowling by Rajasthan, particularly the slower bowlers. The duo of Sanath Jayasuriya and Sachin Tendulkar - with 20 years of experience behind them - were silenced, to the extent that they had to settle for singles and an array of dot balls when the situation demanded at least a boundary every over to keep with the rising asking rate.

Much of that had to do with the early loss of wickets. At 23 for 3, Mumbai looked to their most explosive pair to give the innings a shove but the ball somehow just didn't find the boundary. The spinners were spot on target, varied their pace and slipped in the odd yorker. The boundary drought lasted 45 balls, before Tendulkar chipped down the track and lofted Warne over extra cover.

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