Royal Challengers Bangalore 157 for 6 (Ghosh 62, Meghana 53, Gayakwad 2-24) beat UP Warriorz 155 for 7 (Harris 38, Sehrawat 31, Asha 5-22) by two runs
Five needed from one ball – that was the requirement on the opening night of WPL 2024, and it was the same on the second. While Delhi Capitals could not defend that, Royal Challengers Bangalore did, and got their campaign off to a winning start in the backdrop of a ballistic home crowd at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium.
Asha, the hope
Her Twitter handle is ashathehopejoy; Asha translates to hope. She was a figure of hope and excitement in Bengaluru, changing the game twice. After Sophie Molineux dismissed Alyssa Healy with a peach, Vrinda Dinesh and Tahlia McGrath added 38 off 41 balls. When the pair tried to break free, Asha had Vrinda stumped for 18 off 28. A couple of balls later, she castled McGrath who tried to sweep a ball that was too full.
The Harris-Sehrawat show
Sehrawat is coming on the back of a successful domestic season where she was Delhi’s leading run-getter in the Senior Women’s T20 Trophy while striking at 122.45. Warriorz were 49 for 3 in the ninth over when she joined Harris in the middle. While Sehrawat took her time on a used pitch, Harris kept the scoreboard ticking.
Harris hit legspinner Georgia Wareham for back-to-back fours in the tenth over before tonking Asha for a maximum in the next. She managed to find the boundary regularly before Sehrawat attacked Ellyse Perry. A couple of balls after slapping one through cover-point, she deposited a back-of-a-length ball over deep midwicket. Harris then sent Molineux into the deep midwicket stands to end the 15th over. All that sequence meant Warriorz scored 30 in two overs.
Meghana steadies RCB
The decibel levels soared when Mandhana hit a six and a four off successive balls in the second over after RCB were sent in. But they soon lost Sophie Devine – lbw to Grace Harris, who opened the bowling – and Mandhana.
Meghana showed why she is regarded highly with her footwork, especially against the left-arm spin of Rajeshwari Gayakwad. She hit her only six off Gayakwad – a loft over extra cover – before completing a 40-ball half-century. But in the 17th over, she gave Gayakwad the charge and was stumped.
Ghosh ups the tempo
Ghosh pummelled the seamer for four fours in the 14th over and all those shots went to different parts of the ground – through backward point, over mid-off, between long-on and deep midwicket and through square leg, respectively. A little later, she hit five fours across two overs from McGrath on her way to a 31-ball half-century.
Despite that, Warriorz gave away only 32 in the last four overs, and if not for Ghosh’s blitz, RCB might have ended well below 150.