Cricket Country Staff
Editorial team of CricketCountry.
All-rounder Laxmi Ratan Shukla hit a magnificent century to singlehandedly guide Bengal to the Vijay Hazare Trophy triumph as they comprehensively thrashed heavyweights Mumbai by six wickets in the final.
Written by Cricket Country Staff
Published: Mar 12, 2012, 06:44 PM (IST)
Edited: Mar 12, 2012, 06:44 PM (IST)
Bengal won their first National One Day Championship in fourth attempt © AFP
New Delhi: Mar 12, 2012
All-rounder Laxmi Ratan Shukla hit a magnificent century to singlehandedly guide Bengal to the Vijay Hazare Trophy triumph as they comprehensively thrashed heavyweights Mumbai by six wickets in the final.
It was an outstanding effort from the 31-year-old who has never done justice to his talent but finally came good when it mattered most.
His effort helped Bengal chase down the target of 249 with 23 balls to spare, thus winning their first National One Day Championship in fourth attempt.
Shukla who got four for 38 to restrict Mumbai under 250 then showed his big-hitting prowess, remaining not out on 106 off only 90 balls. His innings included 12 boundaries and two sixes — one off Ankit Chavan that hit the third tier of the Feroz Shah Kotla stand and the other off Kshemal Waingankar that went over the deep mid-wicket boundary.
With in-form batsman Anushtup Majumdar (50 not out), Shukla took Mumbai attack to the cleaners, adding 107 runs for the unbroken fifth wicket stand in under 14 overs. Both batsmen played some great shots — especially Shukla who played the square cut and cover drive apart from lofting the spinners over the in-field.
The winning stroke came off Anushtup’s bat as the ball raced to the boundary even as the whole Bengal squad strode onto the pitch. Credit should also be given to skipper Ganguly (38, 53 balls, 6×4) and Shreevats Goswami (42, 73 balls, 3×4) for adding 69 valuable runs after Subhamoy Das was trapped leg before by Ajit Agarkar.
Ganguly suffered from cramps but still managed to produce a signature cover-drive, a pull off Agarkar and one over extra cover off Waingankar.
Incidentally, it was also Ganguly’s maiden national title as Bengal captain having made his first-class debut way back in 1990.
Opting to bat, Mumbai opener Wasim Jaffer blazed his way to a 41-ball-50 as they reached 76 for no loss in 10 overs.
However, Shukla scripted a turnaround as he first bowled Jaffer (61, 48 balls, 10×4, 1×6), playing to a wrong line, and then induced an edge off Rahane for Shreevats Goswami behind the stumps. Anup Revandkar (15) was trapped in front as Mumbai were reduced to 108 for three in the 21st over. Shukla’s first spell read 7-1-17-3.
After Abhishek Nayar (11) and Iqbal Abdulla (1) departed in quick succession, Suryakumar Yadav (50, 68 balls, 7×4) and Aditya Tare (35) played a good hand, but Yadav played a loose shot off Sourav Sarkar’s bowling to hand a dolly to Wriddhiman Saha at cover. Once Yadav was gone, Mumbai’s chances of posting a big score also went up in smoke. (PTI)
Brief Scores: Mumbai 248 all out in 49.2 overs (Wasim Jaffer 61, Suryakumar Yadav 50, Laxmi Ratab Shukla 4 for 38) lost to Bengal 252 for 4 in 46.1 overs (Laxmi Ratan Shukla 106*, Anushtup Majumdar 50*) by 6 wickets.
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