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Royals fall behind in top-two race

Mumbai Indians 178 for 3 (Simmons 62, Hussey 56) beat Rajasthan Royals 153 for 8 (Nair 48, Harbhajan 2-13, Gopal 2-25) by 25 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Faced with a must-win situation on a dry pitch, Michael Hussey and Lendl Simmons produced a century stand for the first wicket - Mumbai Indians' best in 40 games - that helped them prevail over third-placed Rajasthan Royals in Ahmedabad. Both batsmen scored half-centuries before Rohit Sharma used the platform as a springboard for a 19-ball 40 that lifted his team to 178. Their three spinners then shared two wickets each to give Mumbai Indians a comfortable win that took them level with Sunrisers Hyderabad on points.

However, one has to question the number of changes made by Royals ahead of an important match, given they were still not assured of a place in the playoffs. Kane Richardson, the Royals seamer, had even mentioned on the eve of the match that they were in no mood for experimentation, but there were four changes when Shane Watson came for the toss. They swapped Ajinkya Rahane, easily their best batsman for such conditions, for Unmukt Chand, who hadn't played a game this season, while also benching their best bowler, Pravin Tambe.

With this loss, they have not only kept Mumbai Indians' dreams alive, but also got stuck on seven wins from 12 games with two difficult away matches to go - against Kings XI Punjab and Mumbai Indians.

Unlike Royals, Mumbai Indians' changes didn't need an explanation. Corey Anderson had come to the end of the long rope he had got from the management, CM Gautam hadn't set the scene on fire with his batting and Lasith Malinga had left for England to join his national team. In came, Hussey, Krishmar Santokie and the young Karnataka allrounder Shreyas Gopal, all of whom played their parts.

Hussey had been dropped after only 30 runs in his first four matches for Mumbai Indians but on a slow pitch in Ahmedabad, he showed the quality that the team had been missing at the top of the order. He remained busy in the first half of the innings, manoeuvring the ball with ease, while his partner, Simmons, mainly looked for the big shots. At the end of five overs, Mumbai Indians were on 34, and more importantly, without the loss of any wicket, nine more than their previous best opening stand this season.

Simmons wasn't comfortable with the deliveries that stopped on him but used powerful cuts and lofted shots whenever offered with the right length. He had six boundaries to Hussey's one as the partnership reached 50 in the seventh over.

Hussey, the more fluent of the two, just got better with the day. He crisply timed a length ball from Stuart Binny through covers for his second boundary before deftly punching a slower delivery from Rajat Bhatia through point for his third.

Off the first ball of the 11th over, he hammered a slower bouncer from James Faulkner over deep midwicket. He smashed another six in the next over, before nudging the next ball for a single to reach his half-century off 32 balls, easily beating Simmons to the landmark.

Both batsmen were dismissed in the 15th over, allowing Rohit just enough time to cut loose. Even though Kieron Pollard struggled for timing with the ball reversing, Rohit clobbered three sixes and a four in the last two overs that cost Royals 29 runs.

Mumbai Indians introduced spin early in the chase and Pragyan Ojha, who had just one wicket this season till then, struck twice in his first two overs to remove Chand and Watson. Karun Nair played a free-flowing innings of 48 from 24 balls, but with batsmen offering catches at the other end, the Royals innings came off tracks early. Brad Hodge and James Faulkner, coming in at Nos 8 and 9, landed some parting blows but the match had long slipped out of Royals' hands.

6000

2

Number of batsmen who have now scored 6000+ runs in T20 cricket - Chris Gayle and Brad Hodge

Miserly

6.20

Harbhajan Singh's economy rate in this IPL - he has only been more economical in the 2009 season

Stuttering

3

The most number of wickets that Rajasthan have lost in the Powerplay this IPL

Bradmanesque?

224

Pragyan Ojha's bowling average in this IPL before today - he had taken only 1 wicket in 7 innings

New-ball woes

11

Number of wickets that Mumbai have taken in the Powerplay this IPL - the fewest for any team

Chasers

4

Number of times, in 12 attempts, that Rajasthan have chased down a 175+ score in the IPL - they chased down exactly 178 against Warriors in 2013

Mumbai's 'record'

178

The lowest score by any team in the IPL after an opening partnership of 120+

Boom boom

267

Combined strike rate of Kieron Pollard and Rohit Sharma in the 20th over of an IPL innings.

Up the order

1

Number of previous occasions on which Kieron Pollard has batted at no.3 in the IPL

Steady

6

Number of times that Mumbai have not lost a wicket in the first 10 overs of an innings in 106 IPL games

Doing it in singles

12

Number of consecutive singles taken by Mumbai in the 9th and 10th overs

Middle stability

13

Number of wickets that Mumbai have lost in the middle overs (7th to 15th overs) this IPL - the fewest for any team

Huss v Royals

91

Michael Hussey's batting average against Rajasthan Royals, in seven previous games