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Hussey, bowlers keep Mumbai alive

Mumbai Indians 173 (Hussey 56, Tahir 3-37) beat Delhi Daredevils 158 for 4 (Duminy 45*) by 15 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Mumbai Indians lost their last eight wickets for 33 runs, and were bowled out with three balls left to play. As Rohit Sharma watched his team collapse, the expression on his face went from incredulous to annoyed to angry. This, after all, was a must-win game for Mumbai if they wanted to retain any chance of qualifying for the playoffs.

Eight wickets for 33 runs. And yet, Mumbai won, and comfortably at that. They did just about enough either side of the collapse to keep their hopes alive.

Michael Hussey got them off to a flier with a 33-ball 56, and Mumbai had been looking at 200 before their innings came crashing down. Chasing 174, Delhi Daredevils never got any real momentum going. JP Duminy and Manoj Tiwary kept them alive with an 85-run fourth-wicket partnership, but 32 from the last two overs proved beyond their reach. Marchant de Lange and Jasprit Bumhah bowled two excellent overs to close out a 15-run win for Mumbai.

Sent in to bat, Mumbai profited from some ordinary bowling at the start to run away to 65 for no loss at the end of the Powerplay and 100 for 1 after 10 overs. Siddarth Kaul and Jaydev Unadkat kept drifting down leg to Hussey, and he kept playing pick-up shots and pulls into the gaps on the leg-side boundary.

Imran Tahir's introduction did nothing to slow Mumbai down. On the contrary, it brought Lendl Simmons into the game. He took three fours off the over, two with his favourite square cut - off back foot and then front foot - to capitalise on the width offered by the legspinner.

The dismissal of Simmons brought Rohit Sharma in, and he was soon capitalising on some width of his own - this time offered by JP Duminy, who bowled short and wide despite having only deep cover on the off-side boundary. Mumbai were going at close to 10 an over, and even the first few wickets didn't slow them down. Kieron Pollard hit the first ball he faced for six. Aditya Tare caressed the first two balls he faced to the off-side boundary.

The slide really began when Ambati Rayudu picked out long-off off Shahbaz Nadeem, and soon batsmen were holing out and running themselves out all over the place. Mumbai didn't even play out their full 20 overs. On this pitch, a target of 174 didn't look like all that much.

But Daredevils, as they have so often done this season, batted pretty well without ever giving their opponents a real scare. They got off the blocks quickly enough, with Kevin Pietersen striking three fours off de Lange in the second over of the chase, and were 43 for no loss after five overs. The next five overs, however, brought them only 19 runs and cost them three wickets.

Shreyas Gopal had M Vijay stumped with an enticingly loopy legbreak that the batsman flailed at and missed, but the bowlers didn't have to do too much to earn the next two wickets. Pietersen was bowled trying to switch-hit Harbhajan; Dinesh Karthik was bowled trying to scoop a full, straight ball from de Lange.

Daredevils were left needing 112 from their last 10 overs. They stayed in the hunt, with Duminy clinical in targeting the midwicket area, and Tiwary getting into good positions against the spinners to slog-sweep or hit inside out. When de Lange started the penultimate over by giving away two free runs with a chest-high full toss to Duminy, it looked like Mumbai could come to regret their batting meltdown.

But de Lange quickly recalibrated his radar, and found the blockhole three times in the next six balls. He also dismissed Tiwary, and 30 off 12 balls became 25 off six. There was still an outside chance, but Jasprit Bumrah quickly snuffed that out with some yorkers of his own. Mumbai hadn't been at their best, and had put themselves in some extremely sticky spots, but they were still breathing, just about, at the end of it.

  • Mumbai's last-minute change

    Plays of the day for the match between Mumbai Indians and Delhi Daredevils in Mumbai

  • The last-minute substitution

    Kevin Pietersen gave his consent for Pragyan Ojha's inclusion as a replacement for the injured Praveen Kumar after the toss and the game got underway after a five-minute delay

  • Hussey, bowlers keep Mumbai alive

    Mumbai Indians lost their last eight wickets for 33 runs but did enough either side of that to beat Delhi Daredevils by 15 runs and stay alive in the tournament

Uphill task

26

The most number of runs that have been scored off the 20th over of a chase to win a T20 match - Daredevils need 25.

Setting records straight

170

JP Duminy's strike rate against Mumbai in the 18th over. Before today it was 89.5

Miserly

5.95

Harbhajan Singh's economy rate in this tournament - the best for any spinner (min. 10 overs)

Adjustment needed

10.7

Marchant de Lange's economy rate in the IPL. Across all T20s, it is 8.7.

Thrown into deep end

0

No. of T20 matches Shreyas Gopal has played apart from the IPL.

My bunny

3

No. of times Harbhajan Singh has dismissed Kevin Pietersen in four IPL innings.

Busy Player

139

Dinesh Karthik's strike rate against Mumbai - his best against all current IPL teams except Daredevils (149), his current team.

Off fall the Dominoes

31

No. of runs for which Mumbai lost seven wickets (their 3rd to 9th) - the worst in all IPL.

Pulling the plug

6

No. of wickets that Mumbai lost in the last 5 overs of the innings - the IPL record is 7.

Good signs

27

Harbhajan Singh's batting average against Daredevils (in 6 innings) - his best against current IPL teams

Peaking

149

Mumbai's score in 15 overs - the best for any team in this IPL apart from KXIP (who have scored 150+ four times)

Secret weapon

89

The combined strike rate of Pollard and Rohit against Shahbaz Nadeem in 9 IPL innings (42 runs off 47 balls)

Taking a punt

7

No. of overs bowled by JP Duminy in the Powerplay this IPL - the most by a part-time bowler.

Back in form

28

No. of balls taken by Hussey to get to his fifty - his fastest in the IPL.