Mumbai, who chose to bat first, put up 228-5 in New Chandigarh after a strong opening partnership between Rohit and England’s Jonny Bairstow, who scored 47. Gujarat reached 208-6 in reply despite an 80 by opener Sai Sudharsan in the must-win playoff.
Mumbai will now play Punjab Kings in Qualifier 2 in Ahmedabad on Sunday. (Photo: Getty Images)
ROHIT SHARMA’s 81 helped Mumbai Indians beat Gujarat Titans by 20 runs in the eliminator on Friday, knocking Gujarat out of the Indian Premier League.
Mumbai, who chose to bat first, put up 228-5 at Mullanpur in New Chandigarh after a strong opening partnership between Rohit and England’s Jonny Bairstow, who scored 47.
Gujarat reached 208-6 in reply despite an 80 by opener Sai Sudharsan in the must-win playoff.
Mumbai will now play Punjab Kings in Qualifier 2 in Ahmedabad on Sunday. The winner will face Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the final on June 3.
Bairstow joined Mumbai ahead of the playoffs as some players left for international duties. He scored 47 off 22 balls to give Mumbai a quick start.
Rohit, who retired from Test cricket along with Virat Kohli, survived two dropped catches on three and 12 by Gujarat fielders. He went on to hit nine fours and four sixes in his 50-ball knock, earning him the player of the match award.
"I've got only four fifties (this season), I think I would have liked to get more," said Rohit. "Today, after having some luck going my way, I knew I had to make the most of it. I'm glad I could do that, and get the team into a good position."
Gujarat missed wicketkeeper-batter Jos Buttler. His replacement, Sri Lanka’s Kusal Mendis, dropped two catches.
"Not easy when we drop three sitters, especially in the powerplay," said Gujarat skipper Shubman Gill. "Not easy for the bowlers to control."
Bairstow missed his fifty when Sai Kishore took his wicket with Gerald Coetzee catching a rebound from Sudharsan.
Rohit went past 7000 IPL runs and completed his 47th fifty in the tournament with a four. Suryakumar Yadav made 33 in 20 balls, hitting three sixes and one four before falling to Kishore.
Gujarat fought back in the middle overs as Prasidh Krishna dismissed Rohit and Siraj took Tilak Varma on 25.
Hardik Pandya ended Mumbai’s innings strongly with an unbeaten 22 off nine balls, as Coetzee gave away 22 runs in the final over.
In Gujarat’s reply, Gill fell lbw for one in the first over to former New Zealand pacer Trent Boult.
Sudharsan, who leads the IPL with 759 runs, kept Gujarat in the chase with an 84-run partnership with Washington Sundar, who scored 48.
Jasprit Bumrah bowled Sundar with a yorker, and England’s Richard Gleeson bowled Sudharsan to end Gujarat’s hopes.
Bumrah returned figures of 1-27 from four overs. Mumbai’s head coach Mahela Jayawardene said Bumrah is a "massive asset."
Impact substitute Sherfane Rutherford fell on 24 in the 19th over. With 24 needed in the final over, Gleeson bowled three balls before leaving the field with a cramp. Ashwani Kumar bowled the remaining deliveries to secure Mumbai’s win.
The tournament was extended by nine days after being paused due to a military conflict between India and Pakistan. Some overseas players, including Buttler, left before the playoffs.
SHREYAS IYER led from the front with an unbeaten 87 as Punjab Kings beat Mumbai Indians by five wickets on Sunday to set up an IPL final against Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
Punjab chased down 204 for victory in the rain-delayed last playoff, riding Iyer's 41-ball knock, which included five fours and eight sixes, to reach their target with six balls remaining in Ahmedabad.
Iyer hit the winning six to take Punjab to their second IPL final. The final will be played at the same venue – the world's biggest cricket stadium – on Tuesday.
"I love such big occasions," player of the match Iyer said in the post-match presentation close to 2am local time (2030 GMT).
"I always say to myself and to my colleagues in the team that the bigger the occasion, the calmer you are, you get the big results."
The final will produce a new IPL winner as both Bengaluru, with star batter Virat Kohli, and Punjab are looking for their first title in the T20 tournament.
Bengaluru had secured their place in the final after beating Punjab in the first qualifier last week.
Punjab lost opener Prabhsimran Singh for six, but Australian Josh Inglis set up the chase with quick scoring as he and left-handed opener Priyansh Arya added 42 runs in 18 balls.
Arya fell for 20 and Inglis for 38 after hitting three fours and two sixes.
Iyer and left-handed Nehal Wadhera, who scored 48, turned the game in overs 13 and 14, with Iyer smashing England's left-arm quick Reece Topley for three straight sixes.
Mumbai 'under pressure' –
Wadhera was dismissed in the 16th over, giving Mumbai some hope, but Iyer stayed on to finish the game.
"The way Shreyas batted, took his chances and some of the shots he played were really outstanding and I think they definitely batted really well," Mumbai skipper Hardik Pandya said.
"I think it (the total) was par, but it needed some great execution as a bowling unit which I think in these big games really matters and as I mentioned they were really calm, put us under pressure and I think we were not able to execute the way we wanted."
The second qualifier began two hours and 15 minutes late due to persistent drizzle after the toss.
Punjab elected to field first, but rain forced the players off the field for more than two hours. Officials did not reduce any overs when play resumed.
Five-time champions Mumbai, who posted 203-6, lost veteran opener Rohit Sharma for eight off Marcus Stoinis in the third over, but England's Jonny Bairstow kept up the scoring with regular boundaries.
Bairstow, who joined Mumbai ahead of the playoffs and played a key role in their win in the eliminator against Gujarat Titans, scored 38 in a 51-run partnership with left-handed Varma.
Medium-pace bowler Vijaykumar Vyshak dismissed Bairstow, who tried to play a scoop shot but was caught behind.
Tilak Varma continued to score along with Suryakumar Yadav as the pair added 72 runs. Both scored 44 each.
The two were dismissed within three deliveries, but number six Naman Dhir hit an 18-ball 37 to boost the total, which was not enough in the end.
The league was extended by nine days after being paused due to a military conflict between India and Pakistan. Some overseas players, including Mumbai's Will Jacks (England) and Ryan Rickelton (South Africa), left before the playoffs.
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The 238-run margin was England's second-largest win, in terms of runs, in all ODI cricket. (Photo: Getty Images)
ENGLAND defeated the West Indies by 238 runs in the first one-day international at Edgbaston on Thursday.
This victory, achieved under Harry Brook’s first match as permanent white-ball captain, saw England post a total of 400-8 before bowling out the West Indies for 162. It ended a seven-match losing streak in ODI cricket and put England 1-0 ahead in the three-match series.
The 238-run margin was England's second-largest win, in terms of runs, in all ODI cricket.
Jacob Bethell, playing on his Warwickshire home ground and recently back from the Indian Premier League, was England’s top scorer with 82. Ben Duckett (60), Brook (58), and Joe Root (57) also made fifties in a strong batting performance.
The West Indies bowlers had a tough outing, with paceman Jayden Seales taking four wickets but conceding 84 runs in nine overs.
Chasing 401, the West Indies innings ended with more than 23 overs left. Seales' unbeaten 29 was the top score, one of just three contributions over 20 in the innings.
Jamie Overton (3-22) and Saqib Mahmood (3-32) led the England bowling attack, taking six wickets between them.
The series continues in Cardiff on Sunday and concludes at the Oval on Tuesday.
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Hazlewood claimed two early wickets, including that of captain Shreyas Iyer, to trouble Punjab’s batting. (Photo: Getty Images)
AUSTRALIA's Josh Hazlewood took 3-21 to help Royal Challengers Bengaluru secure a place in the Indian Premier League (IPL) final with an eight-wicket win over Punjab Kings on Thursday.
Bengaluru bowled out Punjab for 101 and chased down the target in 10 overs during the first qualifier of the T20 tournament at Mullanpur in New Chandigarh.
Punjab will have another opportunity to reach the final on June 3 when they face the winner of the eliminator between the third and fourth-placed teams.
Opener Phil Salt made 56 not out as Bengaluru reached their fourth IPL final in search of a first title.
"Just gives us momentum, cliché but true," Salt said after the match. "Back end of the tournament you want to hit your straps."
Virat Kohli was caught behind for 12 off New Zealand fast bowler Kyle Jamieson, who took a wicket without conceding a run in the over.
Salt put on 54 runs with Mayank Agarwal, who made 19. Captain Rajat Patidar scored 15 and hit the winning six.
Bengaluru's bowlers set up the victory after they chose to field and Hazlewood returned from a shoulder injury.
Hazlewood claimed two early wickets, including that of captain Shreyas Iyer, to trouble Punjab’s batting.
Left-arm seamer Yash Dayal removed Priyansh Arya for seven in the second over and Prabhsimran Singh for 18.
Hazlewood then got Iyer caught behind in his first over and dismissed Josh Inglis, who scored seven, in his next.
Punjab lost half their side in 6.3 overs when Dayal bowled Nehal Wadhera.
Marcus Stoinis tried to rebuild as wickets fell around him, scoring 26 off 17 balls with two fours and two sixes.
Leg-spinner Suyash Sharma took two wickets in one over and dismissed Stoinis for his third. The Punjab crowd went silent after Stoinis’s dismissal.
Suyash was named man of the match.
Afghanistan's Azmatullah Omarzai pushed Punjab past 100 before he was last out to Hazlewood as the innings ended in 14.1 overs.
"Not a day to forget, but got to go back to the drawing board," Iyer said. "We have lost the battle, but not the war."
Gujarat Titans will play Mumbai Indians in the eliminator at the same venue on Friday.
The league was extended by nine days after being paused due to a military conflict between India and Pakistan. The revised schedule clashed with the international calendar.
Some overseas players are missing from the playoffs, including Gujarat’s Jos Buttler, who was playing on Thursday for England against West Indies at Edgbaston.
(With inputs from agencies)
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A modest budget meant the NPL could not attract the really big names in the sport (Photo: Facebook)
GLAMORGAN all-rounder Dan Douthwaite was not alone among the foreign players in being unsure what to expect when he headed to the Himalayas to take part in the inaugural Nepal Premier League (NPL) late last year.
Taking up a playing contract in the mountainous nation of 30 million was always going to be a novel challenge for the Englishman, not least because the Twenty20 league was staged at a ground some 1,350 metres above sea level.
"I thought I was going to be constantly out of breath or struggling, but it wasn't actually as bad as I thought it was going to be," the 28-year-old recalled of his time playing for the Kathmandu Gurkhas.
"I think I noticed it more so with sixes. When they got the ball it absolutely went miles. A lot of balls ... kept going and going and going.
"When you think you've hit one straight up and it's a 70-metre six."
Apart from the extra flight of the ball at the Tribhuvan University International Cricket Ground near Kathmandu, Douthwaite's other big takeaway from the experience was the enthusiasm of the Nepali fans.
"Cricket in Nepal is probably like the Premier League in England ... there's a kind of almost Indian cricket feel about the way people appreciate and love the game," he told Reuters.
This was the third attempt by Nepal, which became an ICC associate member in 1996 and has qualified for the T20 World Cup twice, to follow in the path of the Indian Premier League (IPL) by launching its own Twenty20 league.
The NPL hopes the passion of the fans, combined with the country's unique geography and society, will carve out a niche in a landscape dominated by the likes of the IPL and Australia's Big Bash League.
"We're rich in terms of nature," said Sandesh Katwal, the chief executive of the Gurkhas, one of eight NPL franchises.
"It's a beautiful country and we're a friendly, welcoming people. The weather, the hospitality suits international players."
Former England batting all-rounder and IPL veteran Ravi Bopara, who turned out for Chitwan Rhinos, said it was a great experience, even if he turned down the offer of a helicopter trip to Everest Base Camp.
A modest budget meant the NPL could not attract the really big names in the sport.
All eight NPL franchises fetched a combined price of under $1.23 million (£884,559) at an auction held last September. Prize money for the champions, Janakpur Bolts, was around $81,000 (£58,250).
By contrast, India's Rishabh Pant, the highest-paid player in the IPL, commanded over £2m in the league's player auction for the 2025 edition.
A rushed first season also made it difficult to recruit international players, Katwal said.
"Everything happened within a one to two-month period ... most international players were already occupied. Many didn't know about this tournament," he added.
"Since Christmas was near, many overseas players were in a hurry to return. From the second season I think we can plan to start a bit earlier, October or November."
Nevertheless, the NPL proved to be an effective proving ground for Nepal's domestic talent, Bopara said.
"There was a group of players who were full of potential but lacked experience," he added.
Katwal said he hoped the NPL would provide that valuable competitive experience, as the IPL has done for young Indian talents.
"It's a dream come true for Nepali players ... sharing practice sessions with the foreign players, they definitely learned a lot. We also had coaches from India, Sri Lanka, England and elsewhere," he said.
"Since the IPL has started, you can see young players getting opportunities and it has paid off. The NPL is also an opportunity for Nepali players, a starting point."
(Reuters)
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Royal Challengers Bengaluru's Virat Kohli during warm up before the match REUTERS/Mihir Singh
THE proposed World Bowling League has received a major boost after India cricketer Virat Kohli came on board as a strategic investor on Wednesday (28).
Apart from being the leading name in international cricket, Kohli is a social media phenomenon and the third-most followed athlete on Instagram behind footballers Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.
"The World Bowling League (WBL) is pleased to announce cricketing icon Virat Kohli as a strategic investor in the league, igniting a bold new chapter to elevate the sport of bowling," the league organisers said in a statement.
Los Angeles Dodgers star Mookie Betts bought the first announced team in the WBL, which is yet to announce the franchises and schedule of the first event of the league featuring mixed-gender teams.
"I started bowling when I was 11 years old, spinning the ball by 12," the 36-year-old Kohli said in a statement issued by League Sports Co., the owner of WBL.
"It is evident how popular the sport is while being under-appreciated as a business proposition."
"I'm thrilled to join the WBL as an investor and partner."
Kohli owns a team in the E1 World Championship power-boat series and has a stake in Indian Super League soccer team FC Goa.
"When I discovered Virat is also a bowler, it was exciting to align on this new-age vision for the sport," said Adi K. Mishra, founder and CEO of League Sports Co.
"Every week, we uncover more about bowling's global depth and fascinating history - it's a sleeping giant we're ready to awaken."
Former India captain Kohli, who plays in the Indian Premier League, retired from test cricket earlier this month and now only features in internationals in the 50-overs format.