20 reasons to remember the 2009 IPL

May 29, 2009 by Nick Sadleir  
Filed under Features

Get a free copy of the 2009 Cricketers Who’s Who, worth £18.99 when you subscribe to SPIN for a year

1 Bruno the police dog that held up play at the opening match at Newlands. Sachin Tendulkar was early in the process of grafting out a scratchy 59 when Bruno invaded the pitch. As many as 20 people attempted to catch the hound during an 11-minute break in play before he finally trotted off on his own terms.

The St George’s Park crowd. Surprisingly, it was the Port Elizabeth faithful who most embraced the IPL. Packed to the rafters for even most midweek games, St George’s Park went off the hook at every match. Led by the famous brass band in the cheap seats, it is possibly the only ground in the world where the crowd sing their way through every over.

The Super Over between the Kolkata Knight Riders and the Rajasthan Royals, after the tournament’s only tie, was awesome. Shane Warne gave the ball to his youngest bowler, Kamran Khan, and Chris Gayle smashed him for 15 runs off the over. In reply, Yusuf Pathan blasted 18 runs off four balls to give the Royals their first win.

The look on Kevin Pietersen’s face after umpire Simon Taufel gave him out LBW for a duck to Muralitharan. KP was fined for dissent after his reaction to this, correct, decision from the world’s best umpire.

AB de Villiers’ 100 off 51 balls for Delhi v Chennai in Durban, the first ton of the tournament. De Villiers ended up the third highest runscorer, averaging 51.66.

The anonymous (and probably fake) blogger, claiming to be one of the floundering Kolkata Knight Riders, who created havoc with his insults of the likes of ‘Lordie’ (Saurav Ganguly) and ‘Dildo’ (team owner Shah Rukh Khan).  

Suresh Raina’s century that never was. The scoreboard showed 100 runs next to Raina’s name when his team, the Rajasthan Royals, took on the Chennai Super Kings at Centurion. Raina celebrated the ‘hundred’ then went for a big shot off the next ball and was caught on the boundary. By the time Raina got back to the dug-out, the scoreboard had been edited to show 98 runs, as the scorers realised they had made a mistake.

Warne’s on-field beer drinking. Not long after having a cigarette in the nets in Durban, Shane Warne was offered and accepted a large swig of beer on the boundary during a match against the Royal Challengers at Centurion. It didn’t seem to hinder his bowling or captaincy as the Royals restricted the opposition to 105 all out then chased it down with five overs to spare.

Dirk Nannes keeping Glenn McGrath out of the Delhi side. With a maximum number of four foreign players allowed in each team, Virender Sehwag couldn’t find a space for McGrath in his side. Instead, McGrath wound up coaching the Dutch/Middlesex bowler, still a relative newcomer to cricket after his previous career as a World Cup skier.

10 Matthew Hayden’s non-stop run-feast. Forced out of the Australian team earlier this year, the Big Fish was back to his old bowler-bullying self at IPL 2009. Hayden held the Orange Cap, which is awarded to the leading run scorer, for almost the entire IPL season. He finished with 572 runs, thereby keeping the cap despite playing only 12 out of a possible 16 matches.

Get a free copy of the 2009 Cricketers Who’s Who, worth £18.99 when you subscribe to SPIN for a year

11 Yuvraj Singh’s hat-trick in Durban. Claiming the wickets of Test batsmen, Robin Uthappa, Jacques Kallis and Mark Boucher, the part time spinner took a hat-trick on the same ground where he hit Stuart Broad for six sixes in one over in 2007. Yuvraj then smacked 50 off 34 balls, but still ended on the losing side against Bangalore.

 

12 Rohit Sharma’s hat-trick at Centurion. Sharma, the Indian all-rounder and under-23 player of the tournament took a scintillating hat-trick that helped put an end to the campaign of Sachin Tendulkar’s Mumbai Indians.

13 Yuvraj Singh’s second hat-trick in two weeks. This time his efforts were enough to give an unlikely win to his Kings XI Punjab team. Punjab had posted only 134/7 but, thanks to captain Yuvraj, the team were able to defend it as the Deccan Chargers fell short by a single run.

14 Munaf Patel’s sensational over.  Munaf Patel took one wicket for one run in the final over for Rajasthan Royals to beat Mumbai Indians by two runs in Durban. Mumbai needed just four runs off the last over with four wickets in hand when Patel bowled an extraordinarily tight over that included two run outs. Pandemonium ensued. 

15 Charl Langeveldt proved he should have played in every game when he took three wickets for 15 runs in Durban. Kolkata Knight Riders coach, John Buchanan, preferred Ajit Agarkar and even Mashrafe Mortaza to South Africa’s best death bowler. Buchanan’s team lost almost every game while Langeveldt sat on the bench. When the South African was finally given a chance in the last match, v Rajasthan, he took a wicket with the first ball of a beautiful spell. 

16 Manish Pandey’s century. The unknown Pandey was an integral part of India’s success at the 2008 Under-19 World Cup. Three days before the final, Pandey hit an unbeaten 114 runs off 73 balls against the Deccan Chargers at Centurion. Pandey’s 48 off 35, at the Wanderers semi final versus the Chennai two days later, was every bit as good. Watch out for this guy

17 Winning captain Adam Gilchrist’s destruction of every opening bowler in the tournament. Gilly hadn’t really played any cricket since the last IPL but that didn’t stop him from cracking 174 runs in sixes and 216 runs in fours. Gilchrist came second on the Orange Cap table and was a major part of every one of his team’s wins, with the exception of the final, where he was clean bowled by Kumble for a duck in the first over. No-one who saw it will forget Gilchrist’s 85 off 35 balls in the Centurion semi-final against Delhi.

18 Anil Kumble’s excellent bowling and captaincy. Spare a thought for the losing captain who bowled like a master and did everything except win the IPL. Kumble took five wickets for five runs in the first game of the tournament to crush Rajasthan, the defending champions. And Kumble’s four wickets for 16 runs in the final was almost enough to win it.  

19 The fireworks. Lalit Modi went to town on his explosives expenditure. I have never seen such awesome fireworks in my life as I saw every day over the last six weeks. Domestic pets near the stadiums can now re-emerge from under the table.

20 Eddy Grant’s “Gimme Hope Joanna”. The IPL organisers could not have found a better headline act to perform at the closing ceremony concert than the reggae legend, Eddy Grant. The entire capacity crowd stayed behind and sang along loudly along to the words of the ant-apartheid hit as they waved neon fluorescent sticks and hundreds of lanterns sailed off into the cold Jo’burg night’s sky.

Get a free copy of the 2009 Cricketers Who’s Who, worth £18.99 when you subscribe to SPIN for a year