With 51 needed off the last three overs and Sanju
Samson dismissed at 85, the game was all but gone for the Rajasthan Royals
against Kings XI Punjab. Left-handed batsman Rahul Tewatia -- who came out to
bat at four chasing KXIP's 223 -- had been struggling to get going.
He had faced eight balls from Ravi Bishnoi, six of
which were dots. He did manage to get one six but was lagging far behind after
scoring 17 of his first 23 deliveries.
"They were the worst 20 balls I have ever
played," Tewatia would go on to say in the post-match presentation on
Sunday.
The Royals dugout looked on curiously as the match
appeared to be slipping away.
"I was hitting the ball really well in the
nets so I had the belief in myself. I was not hitting the ball well initially
then I saw in the dugout, everybody was curious because they know that I can
hit the ball long. At once I thought that I have to believe in myself and it
was a matter of just one six," said the Haryana-based batsman.
On the other hand, the Kings XI squad was all
ecstatic and waiting for what would have been an incredible win, considering
most of the things they had done that night. Mayank Agarwal's 100, his opening
stand of 183 with the in-form captain, KL Rahul, picking up dangerman Jos
Buttler early, then dismissing Steve Smith and later Sanju Samson with Royals
still needing a lot to win. Not to forget the brilliant fielding effort,
especially Nicholas Pooran's flying save on the boundary line. When you play
and perform such heroic deeds on the ground, you have to believe it is your
day. But it wasn't to be for Kings XI Punjab.
"Keep the faith. The most amazing things in
life tend to happen right at the moment you're about to give up hope,"
Tewatia had said on Twitter way back in 2017.
And that's what he did at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium -- kept faith. In the 18th over, Tewatia brought out the big-hitting that the Royals think tank took the risk on and hit five maximums to take 30 off the six deliveries bowled by Sheldon Cottrell.
Cottrell steamed in and gave him a bouncer to deal
with early on and Tewatia pulled it over long leg. The West Indian went for
another short-pitched delivery and Tewatia sent it over the square. Then
Cottrell pitched it up and Tewatia put it over long-off and he then sent the next
ball, a wide full toss, over midwicket.
Tewatia, however, missed out on the six sixes by one, being unable to connect the fifth ball. He did dispatch the sixth, a wide length ball over midwicket.
"Mr Rahul Tewatia na bhai na. Thanks for
missing one ball," said Yuvraj Singh, who had hit six consecutive 6s
against Stuart Broad at the 2007 World T20.
"In the over of Sheldon Cottrell, I did not
think about hitting five sixes, I was just thinking of hitting three sixes and
I was hoping to take 24-26 runs from that over. When I was able to connect one
ball, I went for one more," Tewatia told Samson in a video posted on
iplt20.com.
The 27-year-old spinner, who had played an
instrumental role in Royals' 16-run win over Chennai Super Kings earlier in the
tournament by picking three wickets, went on to hit another six before finally
falling to Mohammad Shami, contributing with 53 from 31 balls, an innings
studded with seven monstrous sixes.
Jofra Archer, who was supposed to win the match for
the Royals with the ball, then joined the party and along with Tom Curran, saw
Royals register the highest successful chase in IPL history.
It was a night when 449 runs were scored, 29 sixes
were hit, a century and four half-centuries were scored. However, it would go
down as a night which would be most remembered for a guy who stayed true to his
words and kept faith when it mattered the most.