Page 220 - IPL1
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                                                                                                                    he great cricketing theatre of Eden Gardens has been
                                                                                                         the  stage  for  so  many  greats  over  the  years  and  much  was
                                                                                                         expected of the crowd pleasers lined up by the franchise owned
                                                                                                         by the legendary Bollywood film star Shah Rukh Khan ahead of
                                                                                                         the Indian Premier League. In advance, it was a mouth-watering
                                                                                                         prospect, made all the more appealing by the fact that Kolkata
                                                                                                         Knight Riders was being captained by one of Kolkata’s own most
                                                                                                         treasured performers, Sourav Ganguly.


                                                                                                         The  roll  call  was  box-office  quality  all  right.  The  West  Indies
                                                                                                         opener Chris Gayle had kickstarted the World Twenty20 in 2007

                                                                                                         with  a  stunning  hundred  against  the  hosts  South  Africa  and
                                                                                                         was expected to terrorise bowlers once more. Ricky Ponting, the
                                                                                                         Australian captain who has been the best performing all-round
                                                                                                         batsman this century and has had the great accolade of being
                                                                                                         described as possibly the best his country have produced since
                                                                                                         Don Bradman, was signed up for just $400,000, which felt like the
                                                                                                         bargain of the tournament. Shoaib Akhtar was still one of the
                                                                                                         quickest bowlers in the world on his day, and Ishant Sharma, the
                                                                                                         Indian skyscraper had recently returned home from Australia
                                                                                                         with  his  reputation  enhanced  after  giving  Ponting  a  well-
                                                                                                         publicised working-over during the Adelaide Test.


                                                                                                         In the event Gayle was injured, Ponting struggled for runs, Shoaib
                                                                                                         played just three matches – even if he did take four for 11 in the
                                                                                                         win over Delhi Daredevils – Sharma ended up with only seven
                                                                                                         wickets and the show was stolen by Brendon McCullum, New
                                                                                                         Zealand’s glamorous wicket-keeper/batsman. The inaugural IPL
                                                                                                         will be remembered for many things, but McCullum’s opening-
                                                                                                         night knock of 158 not out from 73 balls at the M. Chinnaswamy
                                                                                                         Stadium against Bangalore Royal Challengers may well linger
                                                                                                         longest in the mind’s eye. It was the kind of start the organisers
                                                                                                         can only have dreamed about as McCullum, who had been in
                                                                                                         outstanding one-day form over the New Zealand winter, both in
                                                                                                         domestic cricket and against the touring England side, tucked
                                                                                                         into  Bangalore’s  bowlers  like  a  starving  man  let  loose  at  a
                                                                                                         banquet. He ended up with 10 fours and 13 sixes, one of which
                                                                                                         was a daring paddle over his left shoulder off Zaheer Khan. By the
                                                                                                         end of a pulsating knock, he had surpassed the previous highest

                                                                                                         score in all Twenty20 matches of 141 not out by the Australian
                                                                                                         Cameron  White  for  Somerset  against  Worcestershire  in  2006.












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