Match discarded Mumbai Indians 176 for 5 (Pollard 58, Kanwar 45) v Cape Cobras
Two men at dissimilar ends of the Twenty20 range powered Mumbai Indians to their best batting presentation in the tournament after which heavy rain wiped out the match. One of the biggest names in the format, Kieron Pollard, and a debutant, Sarul Kanwar, went on a six-hitting spree as Mumbai put up a strong 176 next to Cape Cobras.
Aiden Blizzard was probable to be the fire starter at the top of the order for Mumbai; as an alternative it was the little known Kanwar who provided the explosive. Kanwar, a 23-year-old Punjab opener with only one season of domestic cricket behind him, show no fear in his first big game, clouting the Cobras fast bowlers.
The first blast to make people sit up was a clean sway that sent Charl Langeveldt over the midwicket boundary in the second over. Langeveldt was taken for a four and a six square on the leg side in his next over, and JP Duminy left for 17 in the fifth, before Kanwar showed he can hit straight as well by thrashing Vernon Philander over long-off. After five sixes and three fours, he nearly got to his half-century with a fashionable hit over deep extra cover but the shot lack a few yards and was wedged.
Kanwar's endeavor solved Mumbai's headache at the top of the order, and they will also be pleased with the return to form of one of their middle-order stars, Pollard. With Blizzard and Ambati Rayudu falling soon after Kanwar, Mumbai were in danger of losing their way before Pollard intervenes. He warmed up with two hideous straight sixes off JP Duminy, before backing it up with a couple of fours behind square leg. James Franklin connected in by launching Robin Peterson for two more sixes. By the time Pollard completed Langeveldt's horror day by scoring 18 in the 16th over, Mumbai had surged to 143 for 3.
Cobras manage to pull it back a bit in the final overs, with Justin Kemp giving away only two runs in the 17th, but some more boundaries from Andrew Symonds pressed Mumbai to 176. Even as the Mumbai innings wound to an end, the rains arrived and stay for several hours, forcing the team to split points.
Two men at dissimilar ends of the Twenty20 range powered Mumbai Indians to their best batting presentation in the tournament after which heavy rain wiped out the match. One of the biggest names in the format, Kieron Pollard, and a debutant, Sarul Kanwar, went on a six-hitting spree as Mumbai put up a strong 176 next to Cape Cobras.
Aiden Blizzard was probable to be the fire starter at the top of the order for Mumbai; as an alternative it was the little known Kanwar who provided the explosive. Kanwar, a 23-year-old Punjab opener with only one season of domestic cricket behind him, show no fear in his first big game, clouting the Cobras fast bowlers.
The first blast to make people sit up was a clean sway that sent Charl Langeveldt over the midwicket boundary in the second over. Langeveldt was taken for a four and a six square on the leg side in his next over, and JP Duminy left for 17 in the fifth, before Kanwar showed he can hit straight as well by thrashing Vernon Philander over long-off. After five sixes and three fours, he nearly got to his half-century with a fashionable hit over deep extra cover but the shot lack a few yards and was wedged.
Kanwar's endeavor solved Mumbai's headache at the top of the order, and they will also be pleased with the return to form of one of their middle-order stars, Pollard. With Blizzard and Ambati Rayudu falling soon after Kanwar, Mumbai were in danger of losing their way before Pollard intervenes. He warmed up with two hideous straight sixes off JP Duminy, before backing it up with a couple of fours behind square leg. James Franklin connected in by launching Robin Peterson for two more sixes. By the time Pollard completed Langeveldt's horror day by scoring 18 in the 16th over, Mumbai had surged to 143 for 3.
Cobras manage to pull it back a bit in the final overs, with Justin Kemp giving away only two runs in the 17th, but some more boundaries from Andrew Symonds pressed Mumbai to 176. Even as the Mumbai innings wound to an end, the rains arrived and stay for several hours, forcing the team to split points.
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