New Delhi: With 26 runs needed off the final over, anyone would say that the bowling team has the upper hand and is most likely to win the game. This is what RCB skipper Virat Kohli would have thought when he handed the ball to Umesh Yadav on Sunday. However, he was aware of the fact that the batsman at the striker's end was none other than MS Dhoni, a man who has been famous throughout his career for doing the impossible. And he almost pulled it off again.
CSK skipper Dhoni might have fallen short by a run, but what he did start was that he ignited the debate all over again if the former India skipper is still the greatest finisher ever in the gentleman's game. With just over a month left for the 2019 World Cup to begin, the warning bell has been rung and opposition captains will definitely be taking note.
The 37-year-old's innings against RCB was yet another exhibition of the vintage MSD innings which cricket fans in India used to see more frequently in the early 2000s. It was only poetic justice that RCB skipper Virat Kohli accepted that Dhoni had indeed given his team a "scare".
In the ongoing edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL), Dhoni has been in outstanding form scoring 314 runs in the nine games that he has played, at an average of over 100. However, what has been more satisfying is the way he has scored those runs. He has come in at difficult times and has built the innings beautifully. Even at 37, he is hitting the ball as he used to in his younger days, an example of which was the monumental 111-metre six he hit out of the Chinnaswamy Stadium.