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But  the  competition  did  not  turn  out  as  Mallya  had  hoped.
 Bracken  ended  up  missing  the  entire  tournament  following
 knee surgery, and Bangalore got off to the worst possible start,
 blown away on the opening night of the tournament in the M
 Chinnaswamy  Stadium  by  Brendon  McCullum’s  world-record

 158 not out for Kolkata Knight Riders - an innings that would
 have destroyed any side on the day. Although they fought back
 to beat Mumbai Indians in the Wankhede, with the gritty Mark
 Boucher  seeing  the  Royal  Challengers  home,  the  next  three
 games were all lost as pre-tournament fears that some of the
 players  were  better  suited  to  the  less  frantic  environment  of
 Test cricket appeared to be borne out.


 Some excellent bowling from the under-rated Praveen Kumar
 and Zaheer Khan helped see off the struggling Deccan Chargers
 by just three runs on a thrilling night in Bangalore, and a record
 of two wins from their first five matches at least offered Dravid’s
 men a chance of progress - assuming, that is, they strung a few
 wins together.


 But Taylor had by now joined up with his New Zealand team-
 mates  on  their  tour  of  England,  robbing  the  middle-order  of
 some  much-needed  firepower,  and  not  even  the  energy  and
 aggression of Steyn, and some eye-wateringly good innings from
 Dravid  -  written  off  in  some  quarters  as  too  one-dimensional
 to  succeed  in  the  shortest  form  of  the  game  -  could  prevent
 Bangalore from losing each of their next five games. The home
 defeat to Kings XI Punjab was particularly disappointing, with
 only Dravid (66) and India’s Under-19 World Cup-winning captain
 Virat Kohli (34) reaching double-figures. Crucially, five batsmen
 were out for ducks as Bangalore made only 126 after batting
 first. The next day they parted company with their CEO Charu
 Sharma as they sought to remedy their poor form, but it did not
 do them much good.


 The next 11 days brought defeats to Kolkata Knight Riders, Kings
 XI Punjab, Rajasthan Royals and Delhi Daredevils, and by the
 time Bangalore rallied to beat Chennai Super Kings and, for the
 second time in the tournament, Deccan Chargers, the boat had
 long since sailed: the two victories, followed almost inevitably
 by a nine-wicket thrashing at the hands of a revitalised Mumbai

 Indians,  were  little  more  than  consolations  at  the  end  of  an
 unexpectedly disappointing campaign.











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