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County DIV2 (3)
PAK v WI [W] (1)
RESULT
19th match (N), Hyderabad, April 17, 2017, Indian Premier League
(19.4/20 ov, T:160) 154

SRH won by 5 runs

Player Of The Match
5/19
bhuvneshwar-kumar
Cricinfo's MVP
178.61 ptsImpact List
manan-vohra
Report

Bhuvneshwar five-for trumps Vohra's 95

A five-wicket haul from Bhuvneshwar Kumar won Sunrisers Hyderabad a tight game against Kings XI Punjab despite a 50-ball 95 from Manan Vohra

Sunrisers Hyderabad 159 for 6 (Warner 70*, Ojha 34, Mohit 2-25) beat Kings XI Punjab 154 (Vohra 95, Bhuvneshwar 5-19) by five runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Manan Vohra defied a pitch of inconsistent pace and bounce and a situation stacked against his team to produce one of the IPL's great backs-to-the-walls innings. His 95 off 50 balls revived a floundering chase, taking Kings XI Punjab to within 15 runs of victory, but Bhuvneshwar Kumar would ensure he wouldn't be able to finish the match, taking two wickets in the 19th over to finish with 5 for 19.
In the end, neither of them would be involved in what became the nerviest finish of the season. Eleven off six balls usually favours the chasing side, but seldom is a chasing side nine down at that stage. Siddarth Kaul conceded four off the first two legal balls, slipping in two wides, but pulled himself together to send down the perfect yorker with six needed off three. Ishant Sharma couldn't put bat to it, and Sunrisers just about held on to their undefeated home record this season.
Difficult pitch, quiet Powerplay
A pitch full of cracks turned out slower than is usually the case in Hyderabad, with some balls skidding through and others stopping with tennis-ball bounce. Kings XI's seamers looked to exploit this by bowling at the stumps and pitching just short of a good length.
Denied the drive-able ball, the batsmen couldn't play square with too much confidence either - given the line and the tendency of the ball to keep low. Sunrisers only scored 29 in the Powerplay, hitting just one four and losing the wicket of Shikhar Dhawan, caught behind off the glove looking to pull Mohit Sharma.
Warner adapts and prospers
Spin came on for the first time in the seventh over, and David Warner immediately picked up his first boundary with a reverse-sweep off KC Cariappa. In his next over, he switch-hit him for six. By the end of Sunrisers' innings, all but two of Warner's nine boundaries would come behind the wicket.
Wickets kept falling at the other end - Axar Patel dismissed Moises Henriques and Yuvraj Singh off successive balls in the 10th over - but Warner, with a bit of help from Naman Ojha, ensured Sunrisers reached a competitive total. Having scored only 6 off his first 16 balls - all in the Powerplay - Warner went at a strike rate of 168.42 thereafter to finish unbeaten on 70 off 54.
Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Act 1
Interviewed between innings, VVS Laxman, the Sunrisers mentor, felt 159 was a match-winning total given the conditions and his team's bowling resources. As it happened, it wasn't the pitch that gave Sunrisers an early wicket but Bhuvneshwar's swing and full length, trapping Hashim Amla lbw first ball. Glenn Maxwell promoted himself to No. 3 for the first time this season, and Bhuvneshwar dismissed him as well. This time it was the slower ball, coupled with a change of field - he brought third man into the circle, pushed mid-off back, and Maxwell took him on, unwisely.
Those skiddy Afghan spinners
For the first time this season, Sunrisers were playing both Mohammad Nabi and Rashid Khan. They bowled expensive first overs - Vohra and Eoin Morgan took 29 off the fifth and sixth overs of the chase - and Warner had to pull both out of the attack. After a quiet over each from Moises Henriques and Kaul, he brought them back.
Nabi struck immediately, bowling Morgan with one that skidded on, and skid would give Rashid two wickets in the next over - bye bye, David Miller and Wriddhiman Saha. Kings XI were 62 for 5 after 10 overs, and an offbreak from Nabi at the start of the next over could have easily had them 62 for 6. Vohra, though, was saved by the umpire Anil Dandekar, who saw or heard an inside edge when there was none. At that stage, he was batting on 32. In the last ball of the same over, Nabi dropped the simplest of return catches off Axar Patel.
Vohra unrolls his own pitch
Even in the early part of his innings, Vohra had timed the ball better than anyone from either side. What he was also doing, better than most batsmen this season, was picking Rashid's googly out of the hand. Having brought up his fifty in the previous over, the 15th, Vohra went after Rashid again, pulling and lofting him for 4, 0, 6, 6, 4. Suddenly, Kings XI only needed 35 from 24 balls.
Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Act II
Kings XI, however, had already lost six wickets, and they lost a seventh when Mohit Sharma sliced Bhuvneshwar straight to deep point in the 17th over. Two balls later, Vohra timed a back-foot punch so sweetly that he hit it to the same fielder on the full, only for Shikhar Dhawan to drop it. A big six off Kaul in the next over brought the equation down to 16 off the last two, but Bhuvneshwar wasn't done yet.
KC Cariappa, for reasons unknown, decided to slog rather than give Vohra the strike, and Bhuvneshwar went through him with a yorker. Another yorker - or near-yorker - followed when Vohra got back the strike. It struck Vohra on the ankle, on the full, right in front, as he walked across to flick, and Bhuvneshwar had bowled the most important ball of the match.

Karthik Krishnaswamy is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

Win Probability
SRH 100%
SRHKXIP
100%50%100%SRH InningsKXIP Innings

Over 20 • KXIP 154/10

Ishant Sharma b Kaul 2 (5b 0x4 0x6 10m) SR: 40
W
SRH won by 5 runs
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Indian Premier League

TEAMMWLPTNRR
MI14104200.784
RPS1495180.176
SRH1485170.599
KKR1486160.641
KXIP147714-0.009
DC146812-0.512
GL144108-0.412
RCB143107-1.299