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David Warner's 90 powers Sunrisers to 7-wicket victory

The Hyderabad side sailed past Mumbai Indians to register their first win in IPL 9.

Hyderabad: Captain David Warner led from the front with a scintillating unbeaten 90 as Sunrisers Hyderabad thrashed Mumbai Indians by seven wickets to notch up their first win of the IPl-9 season here on Monday.

Chasing a target of 143, Warner anchored the Sunrisers innings with a master class effort after his opening partner Shikhar Dhawan (2) was out in the first over itself as the home side romped home with 15 balls to spare at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium.

Warner hit seven fours and four sixes in his 59-ball unbeaten knock as he carried his bat through the innings to help the Sunrisers bounce back after losing their earlier two matches. The swashbuckling Australian curbed his aggressive intent initially before hitting a flurry of lusty blows towards the end.

Fittingly, Warner hit the winning runs as he sent a Mitchell McClenaghan delivery for a six as the Sunrisers reached 145 for 3 in 17.3 overs to the wild cheer of the home crowd. For Mumbai, it was their third loss in four matches.

The Sunrisers, who have been hit hard by the injury of the likes of Yuvraj Singh and Ashish Nehra, made a stuttering start in their run chase as Dhawan continued his horrible run of form as he was out in the fifth ball of the innings, bowled by Tim Southee.

Warner then dropped anchor and curbed his natural aggressive instinct a bit and chose his shots to find the boundaries.

At the halfway mark, the Sunrisers were placed comfortably at 66 for 1 but immediately they lost Moises Henriques (20) who stitched 62 crucial runs for the second wicket with Warner to lay the foundation for the win.

Henriques was out to a fine delivery off Southee which swung and took the outside edge of the batsman. Englishman Eoin Morgan (11) did not contribute much as he was out, courtesy an outstanding catch by Hardik Pandya at deep midwicket off the bowling of Southee.

The Sunrisers were 100 for 3 at that time, needing another 43 runs off 34 balls and Warner took his side home in style.

For Mumbai, Southee took three wickets for 24 runs from his four overs while all his bowling colleagues went wicketless.

Earlier, left-arm pacer Barinder Sran grabbed three wickets to lead Sunrisers' impressive bowling display as they restricted defending champions Mumbai to 142 for 6.

Put into bat, Mumbai found themselves in a precarious position as they were reduced to 60 for 4 in the 11th over and they made a brief recovery in middle overs only to fizzle out at the death on the face of some fine bowling by home side.

Sran (3/28) led the bowling charge while Bhuvneshwar Kumar (1/17 in 4 overs) and Mustafizur Rahman (1/32) gave able support to restrict Mumbai to a small total.

The Mumbai innings was built around Ambati Rayudu's 49-ball 54, which was studded with three fours and two sixes, and Krunal Pandya's 28-ball unbeaten 49 (3x4, 3x6).

The duo stitched 63 runs for the fifth wicket to take Mumbai to a respectable total and hit 26 runs in the 14th over bowled by Bipul Sharma. Krunal struck three successive sixes while Rayudu got one maximum hit in that over.

It seemed that Mumbai would turn around after the tottering start and post a good total but the home side bowlers had a different idea as they bowled a tight spell in the death overs to restrict the visiting side to 142 for 6.

Earlier, Martin Guptill's IPL debut match lasted just four balls as he was dismissed for 2 in first over bowled by Bhuvneshwar who extracted swing from the pitch early on.

Parthiv Patel (10) was the next man out, clean bowled by Sran in the fourth over after he smacked the bowler for two boundaries in that over, to leave Mumbai at 23 for 2.

Captain Rohit Sharma (5), who pushed down the order in this match, came out at number four but disaster struck Mumbai as he was run out in the first ball of the eighth over bowled by Bipul Sharma.

Rohit failed to regain his crease after he was sent back by Ambati Rayudu as Sunrisers wicketkeeper Naman Ojha whipped off the the bails. Mumbai were 43 for then in 7.1 overs.

Mumbai reached 58 for 3 at the halfway mark and under pressure to find the boundaries, Jos Butler (11) unnecessarily chased a ball down the leg side only to find it kissed his gloves for Ojha to take a good catch.

( Source : PTI )
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