Gayle 175* (66b), RCB win by 130
Royal Challengers Bangalore 263 for 5 (Gayle 175*) beat Pune Warriors 133 (Smith 41, Gayle 2-5) by 130 runs
Chris Gayle can shatter dreams. Ask Ishwar Pandey, the highest
wicket-taker in this year's Ranji Trophy, who got smashed for 21 in his
first over this IPL. Ask Mitchell Marsh, whose decent run with the ball
this tournament was blown out of his memory, with his first over going
for 28. Ask Aaron Finch, the third captain for Pune Warriors this
season, who bowled an over hoping to restrict Gayle but didn't bowl
again after being blasted for 29. Ask Ali Murtaza, a specialist left-arm
spinner thrown into the deep end in his first game this season, only to
be hammered for 45 in two overs.
The fastest hundred in T20 history was built on the misery of others,
most notably a struggling franchise whose owners - they spent US$370
million to buy it - watched shell-shocked at their team's bowlers being
taken apart with a ruthlessness only a game of Cricket '97 powered with
cheat codes could have matched. After Gayle's onslaught, there was only
going to be one result, and further confirmation of that arrived when
four wickets fell inside the first six overs of the Warriors chase.
Their defeat was the second-biggest in terms of runs in the IPL's six
seasons.
The destruction inflicted on the Warriors bowlers broke a series of
records. Gayle smashed the fastest century in the format, brought off 30
balls; made the highest individual T20 score (175 not out); struck the
most sixes by a batsman in a T20 innings (17); helped Royal Challengers
Bangalore hit the most sixes for a team in a T20 innings (21) and reach
the highest total in T20 cricket (263).
The helplessness of the Warriors players was writ large on their faces.
Luke Wright smiled with trepidation when Virat Kohli took a single to
give Gayle the strike off his bowling, Yuvraj just shook his head as he
watched one ball after another sail over the boundary rope and pretended
to snatch Gayle's bat at the end of the innings as he went over to
congratulate him.
The only interruption to Gayle's effort was a 33-minute rain interval.
He had warmed up before that with two boundaries off Pandey, and
proceeded to smack him for three more in the same over after the rain
relented. Unlike some of his innings this season where he was relatively
restrained at the start, he came out prepared to attack from the outset
today. His previous innings, against Rajasthan Royals, was an unbeaten
49 off 44 balls during which he batted 17.5 overs.
It helped Gayle that Warriors bowled to him on a length, allowing him to
hit through the line and straight, with minimum effort that masked the
immense power behind his strokes that cleared the boundary with ease.
Only one boundary out of the 30 to his name qualified as a mis-hit, an
outside edge past short third man. At least two shots cleared the roof,
the shot that brought up his century hit it and rebounded back into the
lower tiers.
That Gayle was not going to hold himself back, having taken 29 off the
fifth over from Marsh, was evident in his approach to spin when Murtaza
was brought on in the seventh over. Gayle decided to target the spinner
with the turn, slog-sweeping and then smashing him flat for two sixes,
then making Finch regret the move to bring himself on, hammering him for
four sixes, all on the on-side. A rare yorker outside off from Ashok
Dinda that Gayle missed was perhaps the only moral victory he afforded
Warriors before reaching his century, a landmark he celebrated with a
punch of the gloves then kneeling down and raising his arms.
Murtaza may just have felt he could slip in a relatively quiet over when
Gayle had mellowed down, somewhat, after reaching his ton, but Gayle
demolished those thoughts. He punished Murtaza for three more sixes in a
28-run over, as Royal Challengers began another phase of domination in
their innings after a moment's breather - the last six overs produced 85
runs.
Gayle's innings was supported ably by opener Tillakaratne Dilshan, who
was part of a 167-run opening stand, an IPL record, during which he only
made 33. He quickly ceded floor to Gayle and played some attractive,
text-book shots through point and down the ground. Unlike Dilshan at the
start, AB de Villiers was the dominant partner in Warriors' ruin at the
death, thrashing 31 in just eight balls in a stand worth 44.
Each played their role in helping Gayle guide the innings, which he did
with a big smile, good-hearted banter with the Warriors fielders during
the carnage, and an animated reaction when he reached his century. He
signed off in the match with a gangnam style gig at picking up
two wickets in the only over he bowled - all a contrast to the man who
made his first international appearance against India in Toronto in
1999, when it seemed hard to imagine a debutant as shy as him would one
day become one of the most colourful characters on a cricket field.
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