Kohli’s heroics and India’s challenging total not enough to carry the day
No team has won a Twenty20 International at the Wankhede Stadium after losing the toss.
India
made a strong case to reverse the trend, but Lendl Simmons had other
ideas. West Indies won the World Twenty20 semifinal encounter by seven
wickets and two balls to spare.
Man-of-the-match
Simmons, who led a charmed life — twice out on a no ball — led the
charge with a 51-ball 83 not out. His knock included seven fours and
five sixes.
Andre Russell 43 (20b, 3x5, 4x6), who hit
the winning run, gave Simmons good company from the 14th over when the
West Indies was 116 for three.
Superb yorker
When Chris Gayle went for 5 done in by a superb yorker by Jasprit Bumrah, India hopes soared.
Bumrah then thought he had Simmons of a low catch off Ashwin only to realise the offie had bowled a no-ball.
That turned out to be a turning point of the game, for Simmons led West Indies through to its second final of the tournament.
India
put up a challenging total thanks to a cohesive top-order effort led by
the unstoppable Virat Kohli, by putting on 192 for two.
With the West Indies having made easy meat of a target of 183 set by England in the group stage, it may not look like much.
Surprise selection
India
began the evening by springing a surprise, roping in Ajinkya Rahane in a
struggling Shikhar Dhawan’s place instead of including Manish Pandey in
place of the injured Yuvraj Singh.
The move came as a surprise since Rahane had been warming the bench all through the league stage.
However,
the Mumbai batsman played his role to perfection by holding up one end
and letting Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli take the attack to the
opposition.
After a relatively sedate start, Sharma took on Andre Russell in the last of the PowerPlay overs.
The
stylish batsman pulled a high full-toss over backward square and
followed it up with a lofted six to the right of the sightscreen off
what was a free hit. The over yielded 20 runs, resulting in India’s best
PowerPlay total of the tournament — 55 for no loss.
When Sharma was trapped in front by Samuel Badree just when he was set to cut loose, in came Kohli, in the eighth over.
This
was the latest he was taking guard in the tournament but such
stupendous form was he in that at the end of the innings, Kohli had not
only registered his highest score in WT20s but found himself just one
run short of his personal best of 90 in T20Is.
The
secret of India’s huge total did not lie in the 17 fours and four sixes
the four batsmen combined to get, but the number of ones and twos they
ran.
That the innings saw only 26 dot balls speaks a lot about the manner in which the Indians sprinted between wickets.
The
last over also elucidated it, with Dhoni and Kohli — whose unbeaten
27-ball 64-run association saw just one dot ball — adding 12 runs
despite hitting just one boundary.
IND 192/2 (20.0 Ovs)
WI 196/3 (19.4 Ovs)
West Indies won by 7 wkts
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