Shane Watson and Suresh Raina made batting look easy on a lifeless track as Chennai Super Kings coasted to a six-wicket victory over Delhi Capitals in Tuesday’s Indian Premier League match in Delhi.
Shikhar Dhawan's painstaking half-century was the only silver lining in Delhi Capitals's sub-par total of 147 for six, which the defending champions overhauled with two balls to spare.
The scoreline may suggest that it was a close game, but CSK were always in control of the chase despite a lot of balls being wasted by Mahendra Singh Dhoni at the end of the innings.
When Delhi batted first, run-scoring looked an arduous job after a middle-order collapse dashed hopes of a big total.
When CSK started their chase, it was expected that the slowness will be a factor but it seemed Watson (44 off 26 balls) and Suresh Raina (30 off 16 balls) were batting on a different track. They showed positive intent which was singularly lacking in Dhawan and Co.
They hit eight fours and four sixes between them to add 52 runs in only four overs and there was no recovery from that onslaught.
Sharma (0/28 in 3 overs) bowled too many length balls which were driven with disdain and short ones were cut ferociously.
Five boundaries off Ishant's in three overs was just the start that CSK needed.
Veteran leg-spinner Amit Mishra got a couple of wickets but mostly bowled a poor length with three maximums coming in his spell, including the decisive six from Dhoni (32 no off 35 balls).
Kagiso Rabada, who was impressive in the first match, was erratic on the day and an altercation with Watson only disturbed his concentration.
By the time Watson was out, it was a formality for CSK to record their second victory even though Dhoni and Kedar Jadhav (27) made an easy chase look difficult.
Earlier, Dhawan again played the role of sheet-anchor in his 51 off 47 balls that had seven boundaries, but failed to accelerate during the final overs.
This left the home team at least 30 runs short of a fighting score.
From a comfortable 120 for 2, with the dangerous Rishabh Pant at the crease, Chennai seized the momentum, effecting a middle-order collapse.
Capitals lost four wickets for seven runs in just 1.5 overs. From 118 for 2 after 15 overs, the last five overs yielded only 29 runs.
With the ball stopping and coming, the Delhi batsmen found Dwayne Bravo's (3/33 in 4 overs) variations difficult to handle.
Ravindra Jadeja (1/23 in 4 overs) also made life difficult for the Capitals in the middle overs and Harbhajan Singh (0/30 in 4 overs) bowled as many as 10 dot balls.
Dhawan, however, continued to hold one end up and hit the occasional boundary in between, even as stroke-making became increasingly difficult.
Pant (25 off 12 balls), during his 41-run stand with Dhawan, tried to negate the pitch factor but did not last till the ‘death’ overs.
He did reach out to a short ball from Harbhajan, dispatching it over long off for a six, but in the next over, his short arm pull off Dwayne Bravo was taken by Shardul Thakur at the deep square leg boundary.
With Colin Ingram (2) and Keemo Paul (0) also being dismissed cheaply, followed by Dhawan, the expectations of a 175-plus total withered away.
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