Mumbai Indians pummel Royal Challengers by 7 wickets
The MI bowlers were efficient while restricting RCB to a timid 131 for six
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Mumbai Indians batter Natalie Sciver-Burnt during WPL 2024 match with Royal Challengers Bangalore, in Bengaluru on Saturday. PHOTO: PTI
Bengaluru, 2 March
Mumbai Indians batters and bowlers
functioned in perfect sync to power their side to a seven-wicket win over Royal
Challengers Bangalore in their Women’s Premier League match here on Saturday.
Yastika Bhatia (31, 15 balls, 4x4,
2x6) and Hayley Matthews (26, 21b, 3x4, 1x6) added 45 runs for the first wicket
in just 3.5 overs to give a sound launching pad to MI. The subsequent batters
exploited the strong start to register a fine win, reaching the 132-run target
with 29 balls to spare to take them to the top of the table with six points. The
MI bowlers were efficient while restricting RCB to a timid 131 for six.
Bhatia gave a fiery start to the
Mumbai chase as she began with a boundary off pacer Renuka Singh in the very
first ball and the introduction of Sophie Molineux prompted her to take
aggression to next level. The left-hander smashed the left-arm spinner over the
deep mid-wicket for a six and then carted her past point for a four. However,
Bhatia was not all power as she showed a delectable touch too, like a flowing
backfoot punch off Sophie Devine.
But Devine had the last laugh as
Bhatia’s drive away from her body was snaffled by stumper Richa Ghosh diving to
her left.
Matthews, who thumped a six off
Georgia Wareham over mid-wicket, perished when she drilled an uppish drive
straight to Smriti Mandhana off off-spinner Shreyanka Patil.
MI needed 63 runs from that point
but stand-in captain Nat-Sciver Brunt (27, 25 balls) and Amelia Kerr (40 not
out, 27 balls) hardly broke a sweat while adding 49 runs for the third wicket
through a medley of pulls, reverse sweeps and late cuts. From there, it was
easy for MI to canter home.
Earlier, RCB would have been in
deeper trouble had Elysse Perry (44 not out, 38 balls, 5x4) and Wareham (27,
20b, 3x4) not added 52 runs for the sixth wicket after MI decided to bowl
first.
Mumbai were without their regular
skipper Harmanpreet Kaur and premier pacer Shabnim Ismail, who have been
nursing injuries, for the second match on the trot, but that did not affect
their intensity.
The RCB top-order batters did not
have the required amount of patience to weather the storm when the MI bowlers
found a fine line early on.
Skipper Mandhana (9, 11 balls) grew
impatient and looked to smash pacer Issy Wong out of the park. But the shot
neither had power nor timing as Brunt completed a simple catch inside the
circle.
It was a similar case with some
other RCB top-order batters such as Ghosh and S Meghana who tried to break the
shackles by force, not the best approach when the bowlers are on top.
Ghosh fell to pacer Pooja
Vastrakar, smoking a drive straight to Sanjana Sajeevan at mid-off, and
Meghana’s weak pull off Brunt ended in the hands of Keerthana Balakrishnan near
backward square leg.
But Perry showed how to score runs
here, selecting her balls to perfection to punish the bowlers. She pulled and
cut Kerr for boundaries in successive balls when the leg-spinner erred in her
length.
She found an able ally in Wareham,
who complemented Perry with good rotation of strike and occasional hits to the
fence.
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