Matches (15)
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PAK v WI [W] (1)
BAN v IND [W] (1)
SL vs AFG [A-Team] (1)
NEP vs WI [A-Team] (1)
County DIV1 (4)
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RESULT
Group B (N), Bengaluru, October 01, 2011, Nokia Champions League T20
(9/9 ov, T:62) 83/1

KKR won by 22 runs (D/L method)

Player Of The Match
61 (47)
colin-ingram
Report

Knight Riders stay alive with big win

Kolkata Knight Riders stayed alive in the tournament with a show of desperation in the field, accuracy with the ball, and aggression with the bat

Kolkata Knight Riders 83 for 1 in 9 overs (Gambhir 33*, Kallis 31*) beat Warriors 155 for 4 (Ingram 61, JJ Smuts 46, Boucher 38*) by 22 runs (D/L method)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
Kolkata Knight Riders stayed alive in the tournament with a show of desperation in the field, accuracy with the ball, and aggression with the bat. With rain lurking in the background, the Knight Riders won the crucial toss but had to deal with an aggressive start from Colin Ingram and JJ Smuts. However, led by Brett Lee and Jacques Kallis with the ball, they fielded superbly to allow only 67 runs in the last nine overs. Lee went for just 25 off his four overs, including nine runs off the 17th and 19th overs.
The sub-par total of 155 was always going to take some defending on a skidding surface flanked by short boundaries and a damp outfield. And with the in-form Kallis and Gautam Gambhir, and Manvinder Bisla playing some scintillating shots, it seemed like the Warriors would need outside intervention. It arrived, in the form of rain, but by then nine overs had been bowled and the Knight Riders were 22 ahead of the par score. That not only brought the Knight Riders, who have now played all their league matches, two points, but also a boost in their net run-rate.
The game was won and lost in the last nine overs of the Warriors innings. Ingram, through some stylish aerial hitting, and JJ Smuts, through muscular blows, had put Warriors on course for a defendable total. But both efforts needed finishing touches, which never came.
JJ Smuts tried to power his way through at the start, and in spite of all his efforts managed a strike-rate of just 106.97 during his 46. He played 17 dot balls. It is usually difficult to argue against an innings of 61 off 47, but tonight there were elements of Ingram's game that weren't up to scratch. He missed out on converting ones into twos, running the first one slowly despite having hit slightly wide of the fielders. He let Shakib Al Hasan get away with a few full tosses. Towards the end he struggled to accelerate. At one stage he wanted to walk off even after edging Lee short of the keeper, only to be asked to come back. He scored two couples, and his last 14 deliveries brought him 11 runs.
Ideally Ingram would have wanted to kick on after his impressive start. He began with sixes off Kallis, Yusuf Pathan and Shakib. The third of those made its way to the press box, on the third floor at the Chinnaswamy Stadium. It was going swimmingly for Warriors then: that six took the score to 77 for 1 in the 10th over, with two set batsmen looking to launch.
Both batsmen hit a boundary each in the next over, but in the following overs they got stuck. Ingram hit three full tosses for ones, JJ Smuts toe-ended a short ball to mid-off, and with a new batsman at the crease the Knight Riders sneaked in a few quiet overs. Ryan ten Doeschate, Manoj Tiwary and Lee were electric in the outfield to assist their bowlers.
Kallis came back in the 16th over with 28 scored off the preceding four overs, and turned the screws further. Just four came off his accurate over, and Lee followed it up with wide yorkers to concede just five off the 17th. Mark Bouhcer scooped his good friend Jacques Kallis for back-to-back fours to take Warriors to a fighting total, but soon followed it up by dropping Kallis.
In the form that he is in, you don't drop Kallis. Boucher's good high catch to send Bisla back was hardly amends. Both batsmen had hit a six each by then, and the Knight Riders had raced away to 35 in the fourth over. That wicket was followed up by a misfield that allowed Gambhir to get going with a four through mid-off. Kallis and Gambhir proceeded to loot 42 off the next five overs, matching each other short for shot. Gambhir was dropped too, when Kelly Smuts couldn't hold on to a high catch at deep cover. That mistake capped off an unsatisfactory night for the Warriors in every department.

Sidharth Monga is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo