Connect with us

Cricket News

IPL 2025: Prasidh, Sudharsan shine as Gujarat sink Mumbai

Published

on

A game-changing spell from pacer Prasidh Krishna (2/18) complemented Sai Sudharsan’s sparkling half-century as Gujarat Titans secured a commanding 36-run win over Mumbai Indians in the IPL 2025 match in Ahmedabad on Saturday.

Sudharsan showcased his growing stature with a fluent 63 off 41 balls (4×4, 2×6), and his 78-run partnership with skipper Shubman Gill (38) led Gujarat to 196/8 after Mumbai opted to bowl.

In reply, Tilak Varma (39 from 36 balls) and Suryakumar Yadav (48 from 28 balls) stitched a promising 62-run stand off 42 balls for the third wicket before MI stumbled in the middle overs to finish on 160/6. 

Prasidh’s late introduction was the turning point of the match.

Introduced in the 12th over, Prasidh, who bowled 14 dot balls, immediately made an impact, removing Tilak Varma (32) with a well-disguised slower ball that was mistimed straight to Rahul Tewatia in the deep.

MI then lost three more wickets, including that of Suryakumar and skipper Hardik Pandya (11) as Titans took firm control of the contest.

This was the first win of the season for the 2022 champions GT, keeping their impeccable home record intact.

Five-time champions MI suffered back-to-back defeats following their reversal at Chennai and they now head home to face Kolkata Knight Riders.

MI’s chase did not get off to a bright start, losing two wickets in the Power Play. Rohit Sharma (8) and Ryan Rickelton (6) fell cheaply to Mohammed Siraj. 

After hitting successive boundaries, Rohit (8) was undone by a peach — a back-of-a-length delivery that seamed in sharply to dislodge his stumps. 

Rickelton, struggling to find his rhythm, dragged Siraj (2/34) onto his stumps to be dismissed for six.

Suryakumar counterattacked, stepping across his stumps to whip Siraj over deep backward square leg for a six. He then disrupted Ishant Sharma’s rhythm with a flick over fine leg and launched R Sai Kishore for two massive sixes.

Tilak played a breezy knock, targeting Kagiso Rabada with three boundaries in succession.

With 89 runs needed off seven overs, Pandya  joined Suryakumar in the middle. But Prasidh’s next over was a tight four-run effort, during which he delivered a fiery short ball that struck Suryakumar on the helmet while attempting a hook.

Suryakumar, on 45, was flat on his back, requiring immediate attention from the physio. Prasidh’s figures then read a remarkable 2-0-6-1.

In his next over, Prasidh struck gold, dismissing Suryakumar with a deceptive cross-seam delivery as MI’s hopes faded further.

With 79 required off the last five overs, pressure mounted, and MI crumbled further with Rabada consuming Pandya with a slower delivery.

Earlier, Sai Sudharsan showcased his growing stature with a composed 63, but a Hardik Pandya-inspired Mumbai Indians fought back brilliantly in the backend to limit Gujarat Titans to 196/8.

The Tamil Nadu southpaw played with supple wrists and exquisite placement to stroke a wonderful 41-ball 63, which included four fours and two sixes.

Just as GT looked set for a 200-plus total, Pandya checked the momentum in the middle overs, finishing with an impressive 2/29, his impact extending beyond the wickets as he also ran out Rahul Tewatia (9).

Sai’s dismissal in the 18th over, trapped lbw by Trent Boult’s searing yorker, triggered a mini-collapse as GT lost three wickets in three balls across two overs.

The big-hitting Sherfane Rutherford (18 from 11 balls) fell in the penultimate over, and MI ensured the total remained within reach.

On a black-soil Motera pitch with variable bounce, 190 appears par for the course.

Sudharsan started his innings with two gorgeous boundaries off Boult in the second over.

He later took on Mujeeb Ur Rahman, welcoming the spinner with a drag-down boundary before launching him for a six straight over the bowler’s head.

Adjusting smartly to wickets falling at the other end, Sudharsan curbed his boundary shots but kept the run rate steady at nine per over.

He brought up his eighth IPL fifty off 33 balls, highlighted by a superb 84-metre six over deep mid-wicket.

Skipper Shubman Gill (38 off 27 balls) also looked fluent, playing mostly in front of the wicket.

The openers in a 78-run alliance capitalised on the new ball, with spin introduced in the fifth over.

Sudharsan stepped up against Mujeeb, while Gill punished the Afghan off-spinner for straying on the leg side, smashing him through fine leg.

The over yielded 15 runs, and GT surged to 46/0 after five overs. The last over of the Powerplay was even more punishing as Gill stepped out to Deepak Chahar to smash him for a six and ended with a short-arm jab for four, helping GT race to 66/0.

But Hardik’s clever variations built pressure, culminating in Gill’s dismissal, caught at deep backward square leg while attempting a pull shot as Mumbai tightened the screws drying up the boundaries for 13 balls.

No 3 Jos Buttler tried to break the shackles with a counterattack. He targeted Santner with a six and a cheeky lap past the keeper.

Buttler’s quickfire 39 from 24 balls in a 51-run stand briefly lifted GT, but Mujeeb removed him against the run of play – his carrom ball inducing an edge.

Shahrukh Khan briefly provided fireworks, smashing Pandya for a six over deep square leg.

But Pandya struck back, setting him up with a slower short delivery and  Tilak Varma took a straightforward catch at a rather  unconventional deep extra-cover.

MI’s fielding was rusty with overthrows and missed run-outs, but Hardik’s tactical brilliance, despite Jasprit Bumrah’s continued absence, kept GT in check.

Cricket News

IPL 2025: Arya’s Ton and Shashank’s Stand Power Punjab victory against Chennai

Published

on

The five-time champions Chennai Super Kings once again fell short while chasing a big target, as Punjab Kings secured an 18-run win in Match 22 of the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 at the Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.

Devon Conway top-scored with a 69-run knock, while cameos from Shivam Dube (42) and Rachin Ravindra (36) offered some resistance. But it wasn’t enough to overhaul Punjab’s commanding total, set up by Priyansh Arya’s stunning maiden IPL century.

Lockie Ferguson was the standout with the ball for Punjab, grabbing two key wickets. Glenn Maxwell and Yash Thakur chipped in with crucial breakthroughs that helped keep CSK’s scoring in check during the second innings.

Devon Conway’s 69-run contribution alongside cameos by Shivam Dube (42) and Rachin Ravindra (36) were not enough on the night after Priyansh Arya’s blazing maiden IPL ton powered the home side to 219/6 in the first innings.

For Punjab, Lockie Ferguson claimed two wickets on the night while Glenn Maxwell and Yash Thakur provided important breakthroughs to keep in control of the second innings.

CSK Start Steady But Lose Momentum

Although if one were to compare wickets in hand, Chennai navigated the power-play without the loss of one, but were not able to maintain the ever-growing run-rate. New Zealand duo Rachin Ravindra and Devon Conway raised 61 runs before the former tried to advance down the pitch and was stumped way out by wicket-keeper Prabhsimran Singh.

Skipper Ruturaj Gaikwad’s (1) lean run at the No.3 position continued as he was caught by Shashank Singh at short mid-wicket. Impact substitute Shivam Dube (42) showed glimpses of his big-hitting prowess and stitched an 89-run stand with Conway.

The former brought his half-century in 37 balls, having slowed down after an initial burst, but struggled to find the boundary. Just when it seemed like they could bring the game back in CSK’s favour, he was cleaned up by Ferguson to end his time at the crease.

Dhoni’s Cameo Raises Hope, But Punjab Hold Nerve

The crowd went into a frenzy as Mahendra Singh Dhoni (27) walked out to bat, higher than his usual position these days and he even made the fans believe for a minute. After rotating the strike against Yuzvendra Chahal in the 16th over, the talismanic wicket-keeper batter sent Ferguson for consecutive sixes.

With Conway unable to find the boundary since hitting a six in the 14th over, CSK quite boldly decided to send in Ravindra Jadeja and retire the Kiwi batter.

Dhoni followed it with a four and a six off Arshdeep Singh in the penultimate over and brought the target down to 28 runs required off the last over. In an anti-climactic finish, a full toss by Yash Thakur saw Dhoni hammer it to Chahal straight at short fine leg. Jadeja hit a six later in the over, but the Super Kings were handed their fourth straight defeat.

In the first innings, after electing to bat first, Priyansh Arya gave the Punjab Kings the perfect start by smashing Khaleel Ahmed’s delivery for a six on the first ball of the game before being dropped by the bowler on the very next delivery and proceeded to hit the quick for 17 in the opening over.

However, Chennai hit back by claiming important scalps of Prabhsimran Singh, Shreyas Iyer, and Marcus Stoinis. Ashwin certainly showed glimpses of his great self on the night when he dismissed Nehal Wadhera (9) and Glenn Maxwell (1) in the same over to reduce the home side to 83/5 in eight overs.

From thereon out Shashank and Arya raised hell for the bowlers and stitched a 71-run stand off 34 deliveries. Arya once again rode his luck, while batting at 79, when he was caught by Mukesh Choudhary, but he stepped onto the rope and it turned into a six. He then raised his century in style by hitting three consecutive sixes of Matheesha Pathirana before edging the next ball for four to reach the three-figure mark.

Arya soon departed after reaching the century milestone, but Marco Jansen (34 not out) and Shashank continued the heavy hitting. The duo raised 65 runs for the seventh wicket, which also saw Shashank raise his third IPL half-century on the final ball of the innings.

Brief scores:

Punjab Kings 219/6 in 20 overs (Priyansh Arya 103, Shashank Singh 52*, Marco Jansen 34*; Khaleel Ahmed 2-45, Ravichandran Ashwin 2-48) defeat CSK 201/5 in 20 overs (Devon Conway 69, Shivam Dube 42, Rachin Ravindra 36; Lockie Ferguson 2-40, Glenn Maxwell 1-11, Yash Thakur 1-39) by 18 runs

Continue Reading

Cricket News

IPL 2025: LSG beat Kolkata in last over thriller

Published

on

Lucknow Super Giants held their nerve in a last-over thriller to beat Kolkata Knight Riders by four runs in a high-scoring contest at Eden Gardens on Tuesday.

Chasing 239, KKR looked in cruise control at 157/2 after a blazing start from Sunil Narine (30 off 13) and a composed 50+ stand between Ajinkya Rahane and Venkatesh Iyer. But with just 83 needed from the final 7 overs, things unraveled dramatically.

LSG skipper Rishabh Pant slowed things down, just as he had in the T20 World Cup final, giving his bowlers time to regroup. Shardul Thakur struck the turning blow, breaking the Rahane-Iyer stand and triggering a collapse—KKR lost 5 wickets for just 23 runs.

Earlier, Mitchell Marsh smashed his fourth fifty of the season while Nicholas Pooran blasted a 21-ball half-century as Lucknow Super Giants’ top-order made light work of Kolkata Knight Riders’ attack to post a mammoth 238/3.

On a sweltering afternoon with a real feel of 40°C, LSG’s opening pair of Aiden Markram (47 off 28; 4×4, 2×6) and Marsh (81 off 48; 6×4, 5×6) gave them a blazing start, adding 99 runs off just 62 balls after being put in to bat.

Pooran then lit up the evening with his 36-ball unbeaten 87, studded with seven fours and eight sixes, to power them to their second highest IPL total.

The lefthander cleverly targeted the short leg-side boundary from the dressing room end, and smashed Harshit Rana for two massive sixes over the leg-side to start the 17th over — regaining the Orange Cap from Marsh in the process.

Such was the domination that LSG reached 95 without loss at the halfway stage and then added 143 in the last 10 overs with Pooran leading the carnage.

It was a clinical batting performance from LSG’s top-three. Markram’s early impetus, Marsh’s consistency, and Pooran’s finishing fireworks left KKR completely outclassed on their preferred dry and sticky wicket.

Markram was the early aggressor, plundering Spencer Johnson for 18 runs in his second over. He lofted two fours and a six off successive deliveries.

KKR’s most economical bowler, Vaibhav Arora, began impressively with a tight off-stump line, conceding just eight runs in his first two overs but found little support from the other end.

KKR turned to Varun Chakravarthy in the fifth over to stem the flow of run. He initially applied the brakes, conceding just 16 runs from his first three overs. But with both openers well set, the breakthrough never came.

Marsh was particularly fluent, working the gaps with ease, while Markram powered his way to 47 before Harshit Rana finally broke the stand in the 11th over with an off-cutter that rattled the stumps.

But if KKR hoped for respite, Pooran had other ideas. The left-hander launched a brutal assault, racing to his third IPL fifty in just 21 balls as he toyed with the KKR bowlers.

Marsh and Pooran added 71 runs off 30 balls for the second wicket, before the Australian fell to Rana after completing his fifty in 36 balls.

But Pooran ensured the momentum never dipped, smashing Varun for a six and four in the 14th over — the spinner’s most expensive of the evening — which went for 16 runs.

In the middle overs, LSG plundered 75 runs, setting themselves up for a huge total.

KKR’s bowlers had little to offer on their traditionally slow and dry surface.

Varun finished with 0/31, while Johnson was taken apart for 46 runs in his three. Sunil Narine, too, was expensive, leaking 33 from his three overs without a wicket.

Arora remained KKR’s standout bowler, conceding just 35 runs from his four overs, but lacked support from the rest.

Andre Russell, usually deployed as a partnership-breaker, came on only in the 16th over in a baffling decision but by then LSG had made 170.

Continue Reading

Cricket News

IPL 2025: RCB edge MI in a run-fest

Published

on

Spinner Krunal Pandya upstaged brother Hardik as Royal Challengers Bengaluru edged Mumbai Indians by 12 runs in a high-scoring thriller in the IPL 2025 match in Mumbai on Monday.

Krunal picked up three wickets in the final over as Mumbai Indians finished on 209/9 in their 20 overs after being set 222 for victory, to suffer their fourth defeat in five matches in IPL 2025.

This was RCB’s first victory at the Wankhede Stadium in 10 years, having last won at the venue in 2015.

Mumbai Indians were reeling at 99/4 following the dismissal of Suryakumar Yadav (28), before skipper Hardik Pandya (42 off 15 balls) and Tilak Varma (56 off 29 balls) launched a stunning counter-attack to propel the hosts back into the contest.

Hardik went hammer and tongs while hitting three fours and four sixes, while Tilak also fought his way back into form, but the target proved far too much for Mumbai Indians who were again ordinary with the bat for a large part in their chase.

Captain Hardik blazed his way to an entertaining 42 from 15 balls, putting on 89 runs from 32 balls for the fifth wicket with Tilak Varma, who stroked 56 from 29 balls.

RCB’s experience in the pace department proved vital as Bhuvneshwar Kumar dismissed Tilak in the 18th over before Josh Hazlewood doused MI’s hopes, getting Hardik caught at deep midwicket in the penultimate over.

The run chase didn’t start on the right note for the struggling MI. Rohit Sharma (17) was cleaned up by Yash Dayal (2/46) while swinging across an inswinging delivery and MI’s best batter Suryakumar struggled during his 28-run knock for which he consumed 26 balls.

On the other hand, Tilak brought up his maiden fifty of the season off 26 balls to make a comeback after being retired out in the last game.

The fortunes swung when Hardik clobbered two sixes and as many fours off his first four balls off Krunal Pandya in the 14th over.

In the final over, MI needed 19 runs to win but Krunal Pandya took three wickets to shut the doors on them, picking up the wickets of Mitchell Santner, Deepak Chahar and Naman Dhir to finish with excellent figures of 4/45.

Earlier, RCB rode on scintillating fifties from Virat Kohli (67) and skipper Rajat Patidar (64) to post a huge 221/5.

Kohli ruled the roost with a 42-ball 67 which gave RCB early impetus in Jasprit Bumrah’s (0/29) comeback game. Later on, Patidar smashed a blistering 32-ball 64, hitting four sixes and five fours, while Jitesh Sharma entertained with a splendid cameo of 40 from 19 balls, with four sixes and two fours to dismantle the MI attack in the final few overs.

Put into bat, RCB suffered an early blow when Phil Salt (4) played across the line to an inswinger from Trent Boult (2/57) to be bowled off an inside edge in the first over.

Unfazed by the early blow, RCB recorded their highest powerplay score against Mumbai Indians by scoring 72/1, as both Kohli and Devdutt Padikkal (37 off 22 balls) went all guns blazing.

The momentum had swayed RCB’s way before MI introduced Bumrah in the fourth over, and Kohli welcomed his India teammate with a six over midwicket.

Going at nearly 10 an over, RCB collected 20 runs off the final over in the Powerplay from Deepak Chahar as Padikkal tore into the India bowler, smacking two sixes and a four.

RCB’s onslaught had also left MI clueless for a while, as Will Jacks was brought on to bowl inside the Powerplay and was duly punished for 10 runs.

Padikkal was severe on any MI bowler who erred in his length, smashing three sixes and two fours before he was caught at long-on miscuing the lofted shot off spinner Vignesh Puthur in the ninth over. By then however, he had added 91 runs off 52 balls with Kohli for the second wicket to set the tone for the visitors.

Kohli has had significant success with the bat at Wankhede Stadium and Monday was no different — if he began with a few unconvincing boundaries, his exquisite drive through covers off Boult in the third over showed he was up for a big knock.

Kohli capitalised on every opportunity to score, whether it was picking gaps with ease or his immaculate running between the wickets.

Having completed 13,000 runs to move into unchartered territory for any Indian in the format in a little over 400 matches, a century appeared on the horizon. 

But, in the 15th over, Kohli uncharacteristically walked across the crease to heave Pandya over the leg side but holed out to Naman Dhir at deep midwicket, as his innings ended with two sixes and eight fours.

Patidar was belligerent with his strokes down the ground as well as behind the wicket, bringing up his fifty off only 25 balls. He struck MI skipper Hardik Pandya for 23 runs in the 17th over.

Patidar’s innings ended in the penultimate over when a top edge was grabbed near the ropes by a diving Ryan Rickelton in what was one of the most spectacular catches of this IPL season.

Continue Reading

Trending