Page 176 - IPL1
P. 176

when fielding restrictions encouraged batsmen to go for broke.
 No one bowled more overs with a better economy-rate than his
 6.61, and the stranglehold he routinely applied forced batsmen
 to take risks at the other end.


 Not  that  this  proved  easy  either.  Assisting  McGrath  was
 Pakistan’s  Mohammad  Asif,  a  bowler  who  had  made  his
 admiration for the Australian clear enough in the past and who
 for a while resembled the sorcerer’s apprentice. Asif fell away as
 the tournament progressed and he was later accused of failing
 a drugs test, but McGrath had plenty of assistance in the shape

 of Sri Lanka’s Farveez Maharoof, another seamer who seemed
 capable of landing the ball on a 100-rupee note with his eyes
 closed. Often under-rated, Maharoof finished with an economy-
 rate of 6.91 (anything under seven in the helter-skelter world of
 Twenty20 is truly outstanding) and included among his golden
 spells analyses such as two for 11 against Rajasthan Royals and
 two for 13 against Bangalore Royal Challengers.


 Added  into  this  overseas  mix  were  the  likes  of  Vijaykumar
 Yo  Mahesh,  a  20-year-old  seamer,  who  with  16  wickets  ended
 up  claiming  more  victims  than  any  of  his  more  celebrated
 colleagues, and the tricky legspinner Amit Mishra, who conceded
 fewer than seven an over – a small miracle for a back-of-the-
 hand  twirler  –  and  included  figures  of  five  for  17  against  the
 hapless Hyderabadis. It was to Delhi’s credit that the services
 of  New  Zealand’s  captain  and  left-arm  spinner  Daniel  Vettori
 were  hardly  required,  despite  his  performances  at  the  World
 Twenty20,  where  he  went  for  a  mere  5.33  runs  per  over,  the
 lowest  figure  in  the  tournament,  while  collecting  11  wickets.
 Even so, figures of one for 14 in four overs against Bangalore
 Royal Challengers in one of only two games he played before
 joining his compatriots on their tour of England were a reminder
 of what he was capable.


 The sum of the parts was a beguiling mix of aggression, style,
 dedication,  parsimony  and  novelty,  and  four  wins  in  their
 first  five  games  marked  Delhi  out  as  a  team  to  watch.  Four
 straight defeats followed as the team threatened to lose their

 momentum,  but  their  only  other  loss  thereafter  came  in  the
 semi-final  against  Shane  Warne’s  Rajasthan  Royals.  It  was  a
 setback that will make this most resourceful of franchises all
 the keener to do even better in 2009.
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