Royals ride on Pathan, Smith

The Rajasthan Royals kept their slate clean against Deccan Chargers by winning the return leg of their IPL match by eight wickets at the Sawai Man Singh Stadium here on Friday.
After restricting the visitors to a modest 140 for 8, the home side rode on a big opening stand of 109 between a lucky Yusuf Pathan and gritty Graeme Smith (40) to overhaul the target with much to spare.
Rajasthan could have been in trouble in the second over had umpire Mark Benson upheld a confident leg before wicket appeal against Yusuf Pathan off R.P. Singh. Television replays showed the ball would have clipped his leg stump. The batsman was on 1 and the team score 10 then. Pathan was let off again, on 30, when Vijay Kumar misjudged a skier after the batsman tried to hit Shahid Afridi out of the ground. The ball dropped right in the 30-yard circle, not too far away from the batsman who was on 30 then. The Royals were 51 for no loss in the seventh over.
Pathan finally fell going for the big one though, caught by Herschelle Gibbs on the boundary off Pragyan Ojha, but not before he had done the damage by slamming 68 in just 37 balls, nine of which he sent to the boundary and two over it.
Earlier, Gilchrist’s innings was one of dominance as he intimidated the bowlers, smashing them around the ground. The four boundaries that he struck and a six that sailed into the stands were testimony to his slam-bang approach. The left-hander cracked Sohail Tanveer through the covers first ball to fence, and again over point to take eight runs off the first over. He was severe the next time Tanveer came around as well, cutting loose to crash three more boundaries as the scoreboard began to gallop.
However, Gibbs lived dangerously at the other end. He was dropped by his South African captain Graeme Smith at point as he cut paceman Munaf Patel. The opener appeared shaky even as he scored a couple of boundaries before edging Patel to wicketkeeper Mahesh Rawat. By then, the Chargers were sitting pretty at 61 in the eighth over.
Then, Warne introduced himself into the attack and applied the brakes by maintaining a tight line and length. The dipping run rate translated into pressure on the batsmen, who, going for the big shots, lost wickets in a heap.
Scot Stryis, Gilchrist, Shahid Afridi, Rohit Sharma and Sanjay Bangar fell in quick succession as Chargers sank to 105 for 6 in the 15th over.
With none to hold the innings together, former India player Y. Venugopala Rao put up a rare rearguard resistance to guide the side to a modest total. Venu remained unbeaten on a quick 22 which included three boundaries and a six.





I wonder why the team
I wonder why the team management hasn't spoken up yet. The diference between challengers and chargers is that at least in challengers someone ( aka Mallya ) wants acocuntability. I think DC team management is as smug as its players.
I think Afridi and Gilly
I think Afridi and Gilly would be the most dangereous opening batting pair in IPL and also for DC
It was a disastrous match,
It was a disastrous match, we losing to Rajasthan Royals.
It looked to me as if came in to bat just to complete the formality, they threw their wicket which even a sensible U-16 Team player will not do in such a crucial moment of the match.
'Afridi' (hitting the same old shot and gave a catching practice to Warne),
'Bangar' (Edges a Bouncer to the keeper, totally
unncessary shot),
'Teja' (Tries for a reverse sweep and was given lbw, he cant play the regular shots properly then why experiment a new kind of shot)
What else does these guys want, after getting such a good start of 87-1 at one time became 105-6 in about 4 overs.
Drop Afridi for the rest of the tournament and put him and Bangar for Sell-off for the next edition of IPL.
keep up d 4m of losing
keep up d 4m of losing guyz!!!!!congratz 4 losng!!!!!
d chargerz r down and
d chargerz r down and out!!!nw dey shld jst play 4 der pride!!!!!!
as we all knew it tht
as we all knew it tht Defeating CSK & MI was just a fluke we are back in our form (losing form) keep it up and keep on losing