Sunrisers Hyderabad snapped their early-season wobble emphatically, crushing Kolkata Knight Riders by 65 runs on Thursday, with Heinrich Klaasen’s composed half-century steering them to a commanding total
that KKR never came close to challenging.
Blessing Muzarabani’s impressive 4/41 provided the standout bowling figures for KKR, but the night belonged to Klaasen, whose assured 52 from 35 deliveries anchored the SRH innings and pushed them to a formidable 226/8 after Ajinkya Rahane opted to field.
In response to the stiff target, KKR’s chase never really ignited. They were dismissed for 161, falling to a second straight loss after their opening defeat to Mumbai Indians at the Wankhede, and again struggling to stitch together meaningful partnerships.
With a powerful batting order featuring Finn Allen, IPL’s most expensive overseas signing Cameron Green (Rs 25.20-crore), Rinku Singh and Sunil Narine, the total initially appeared within reach on the traditionally high-scoring Eden Gardens track.
However, the innings cried out for a stabilising stand in the middle overs, and instead exposed a clear lack of cohesion in the KKR ranks as they folded inside 16 overs.
Compounding their problems, mystery spinner Varun Chakravarthy endured a tough outing, conceding 25 runs in a single over and finishing with 0/31 from two. Narine (0/39) also went wicketless through his full quota of four overs.
SRH’s bowlers, in contrast, executed their plans sharply. Left-arm seamer Jaydev Unadkat led the way with 3/21 from three overs, including the key scalp of Rahane, while Ehsan Malinga (2/14 in two overs) and Nitish Kumar Reddy (2/17 in two overs) provided incisive support.
Rahane’s laboured eight from 10 balls did little to silence doubts over KKR’s decision to hand him the captaincy, and with partnerships repeatedly breaking down, the batting effort never recovered.
Young Angkrish Raghuvanshi was the lone bright spot, compiling a lively 52 off 29 balls (6×4, 2×6), but he found no sustained backing from the other end.
Fresh off his 100 not out in the T20 World Cup semifinal against South Africa at the same venue a month earlier, Allen flashed his power early again with a blistering seven-ball 28 (4×4, 2×6).
His departure, however, proved a turning point. Attempting another aggressive stroke, he offered a return catch to Harsh Dubey, and from there, KKR’s innings quickly began to crumble.
Green’s difficult start to the season continued soon after. He was run out for 2 following a chaotic mix-up with Raghuvanshi, who had played the shot and set off.
Malinga intervened in the field, stopping the ball with his foot, and Green was caught short of his ground.
Raghuvanshi initially walked off, but replays confirmed Green had not completed the run, forcing the Australian to make his way back to the pavilion instead.
The drama around running between the wickets persisted.
Raghuvanshi, despite being KKR’s top-scorer, was later involved in another misunderstanding and run out again, encapsulating the disarray in the visitors’ chase.
The situation worsened when Anukul Roy fell soon after, leaving half the side dismissed and the pursuit of 226 effectively in ruins.
Vice-captain Rinku Singh tried to mount a counterattack with 35 off 25 balls, but once Reddy removed him, any faint prospect of a comeback disappeared.
Earlier, Klaasen had walked in at a tricky moment, with SRH reeling from a middle-overs wobble that saw them slip from 110/1 after eight overs to 118/4 by 9.2 overs, threatening to undo their electric start.
He calmly rebuilt from there, keeping the innings organised and the scoring rate under control, ensuring SRH did not drift despite the flurry of wickets.
As the boundaries became harder to come by, the experienced South African relied on sharp running and smart strike rotation, maintaining the scoring rate around 11 an over in tandem with Nitish Kumar Reddy (39; 24 balls) during a pivotal 82-run stand off 53 balls.
The pair brought up their 50-run partnership in just 36 balls, with Klaasen collecting four fours and a six in his measured 52 off 35, preserving the tempo created by openers Travis Head (46; 21 balls) and Abhishek Sharma (48; 21 balls).
Head and Abhishek had earlier spectacularly launched SRH, racing to an 82-run opening partnership in only 34 balls and driving the run rate close to 15 an over as KKR’s inexperienced attack struggled to find answers.
After scratching his way to one off his first four deliveries, Head exploded, clubbing five fours and two sixes in a nine-ball burst as the true Eden surface offered consistent bounce and pace.
Abhishek initially played a supporting role before turning aggressor, targeting Varun Chakravarthy with three fours and a six in a single over, while Kishan kept the scoreboard moving with a stream of boundaries at the other end.
The stand was eventually broken by rookie seamer Kartik Tyagi, who dismissed Head and gave KKR a much-needed breakthrough.
A shrewd tactical call soon followed, as Muzarabani was introduced in the ninth over. Coupled with alert work in the field from Rinku Singh, the change triggered a collapse that temporarily checked SRH’s surge before Klaasen steadied things.
Muzarabani’s impact was immediate: he removed skipper Ishan Kishan (14) and the well-set Abhishek in the space of three balls, flipping the momentum.
In a sudden downturn, SRH lost three wickets for just seven runs, handing KKR a window to claw back control.
Anukul Roy, deployed as a sixth bowling option, tightened the screws further by sending back Aniket Verma (1), leaving SRH in need of a rebuilding effort.
Klaasen assumed that role, starting cautiously to shore up the innings and then accelerating in the latter overs once the platform was reset.
KKR, however, found another opening late on when Vaibhav Arora struck twice at the death, removing set batters and curbing SRH’s push towards an even bigger total.
Muzarabani returned to finish strongly, cleaning up the tail by dismissing Klaasen and Shivang Kumar (4) in the final over to complete his four-wicket haul, but by then SRH had enough on the board, and their bowlers ensured the total proved more than sufficient.
(With PTI Inputs)














