Rohit, Simmons cap turnaround with title

Tuesday, 26 May 2015 00:03 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

ESPNCricinfo: Mumbai Indians completed one of the most remarkable turnarounds in the eight-year history of the Indian Premier League by transforming a terrible start to the tournament – they were at the bottom of the table for the first two weeks – into a title win.

The final, a repeat of their 2013 success at the same ground against the same opposition, turned out to be one of the easier outings after an unbridled early onslaught by Rohit Sharma and Lendl Simmons, both of whom hit half-centuries, stunned Chennai Super Kings – veterans of IPL finals – into submission. Super Kings were not even given a sniff.

MS Dhoni’s choice of bowling first on a patchy Eden Gardens pitch was interesting, not because he might have over-compensated for the presence of dew later on but because it was a departure from a strategy that had worked for Super Kings during in their two previous title wins - bat first, score big, then apply the squeeze.

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Mumbai Indians celebrate with the IPL 2015 trophy, Mumbai Indians v Chennai Super Kings, IPL 2015, Final, Kolkata, 24 May – BCCI

 



The start was perfect; Faf du Plessis ran out Parthiv Patel brilliantly and Ashish Nehra ensured only one came off the first over. But that was it, because once Rohit tore into the second over, picking 16 off Mohit Sharma, Super Kings were always chasing the ball.

R. Ashwin was introduced in the fourth over, overstepped once and paid the price with a 12-run over. Jadeja was also bowled inside the Powerplay but Simmons smashed him for 14 runs to make it 61 runs off the first six. After seeing Rohit kick-start the innings with a flurry of boundaries in the first three overs, Simmons had played all but one ball in the next three and had overtaken Rohit.

The spreading of field was not going to have an effect on the tiny outfield. Simmons continued hogging majority of strike and continued finding boundaries to reach his sixth half-century of the season in the 10th over.

The run-rate showed no signs of stemming but Dhoni continued to hold back Dwayne Bravo, the leading wicket-taker of the tournament. As fate had it, it was Bravo who broke the dangerous stand in his first over - the 12th of the innings - by which time Rohit, too, had reached his half-century, of just 24 balls, and the run-rate was hovering around 10.

An animated speech by Dhoni in the team huddle at Rohit’s dismissal had a brief effect: Dwayne Smith sent Simmons back with his first ball of the tournament and 30 runs came off four overs. But on 150 after 16 overs with Kieron Pollard and Ambati Rayudu warmed up, Mumbai Indians were waiting to explode.

Nehra bore the brunt – he was hit for three sixes and a four in the 17th by Pollard – and Mumbai Indians finished for only the second ever 200-plus total in an IPL final.

Super Kings’ chase needed early thrust but it never came. Smith, as had happened throughout the season, struggled to time the ball. He did reach a half-century - his second this season - but Super Kings needed more from him than a strike rate of 118. Harbhajan Singh dismissed Smith an over after he had removed Raina, Malinga struck too and Mitchell McClenaghan collected three. Super Kings’ wait for their third title entered its fifth year.

‘Started from the bottom now we here’: Pollard

“Two IPL titles, a lot of other domestic T20 titles in the bag and the long list of titles go on and on. I thank God for that and I feel like I am a winner. I feel I am blessed. I hope I continue to do well for whichever team I play for and keep racking up titles … Started from the bottom, now we here.”

Allrounder Kieron Pollard invoked the rapper Drake after Mumbai finished on top after spending a lot of time at No. 8

“Being a part of an IPL winning team is going to be at the top of my list in my cricketing career for a long time. I guess life will be changing for me after this. This experience with the Mumbai Indians will change the way I look at the game. Hopefully this is just the beginning and I have lots more to look forward to in the future.”

Allrounder Hardik Pandya on the experience of his maiden IPL season

“Because I had won this tournament before, I was much more confident this time. One thing that I have learned this season is that you have to be consistent with your plans and not lose patience if you are not doing well as a team. Even when you lose a few games, you should not chop and change things. It makes life difficult for the players and the team on the whole.”

The captain Rohit Sharma on how his leadership has evolved this season

“The way Ricky led Australia for so many years was very fascinating to see. He has brought that to MI. He was very clear in one message to the team throughout the tournament. It was, ‘We are going to play our best cricket and no one can stop us from doing that. If we do it, nobody can come near us’. A lot of credit should go to Ricky, Sachin paaji, Shane Bond, Jonty Rhodes, Robin Singh and all the support staff members for our success in this competition.”

Offspinner Harbhajan Singh on the difference the coach Ricky Ponting and the support staff made

“Just being positive; we always had the talent. It was just ensuring that the guys believed in each other and realise that they were playing for the mate next to them and not just themselves. That’s what triggered the turnaround – we started playing for each other and put our bodies on line for each other.”

Fast bowler Mitchell McClenaghan on how Mumbai turned it around

“Some of the guys that played for MI for the first time this season did extremely well for us. The likes of J Suchith and Hardik Pandya were very impressive. Also, Vinay Kumar – I know he is an experienced campaigner, but this was his first year for MI. I thought he didn’t start out very convincingly but he finished brilliantly. He peaked at the right time.”

Sachin Tendulkar on how Mumbai’s fresh talent performed this season

“I have loved batting with Parthiv Patel this season and I believe we complement each other really well. When I haven’t scored, he has scored and when he has not got going, I have managed to put up a good show. I believe we created a good platform for the side in the tournament and we have done our role well in the Powerplay overs.”

Opener Lendl Simmons on his partnership with Pathiv Patel

“I think there are a range of guys who have impressed me from this team. I think the two guys who played for us consistently in the back end of the tournament; Hardik Pandya and Jagadeesha Suchith have great attitudes and worked hard. They have got big futures ahead and it was fun working with them.”

Bowling Coach Shane Bond on the young Mumbai players that impressed him

 

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