
Kohli primed to banish years of heartache in IPL playoffs
NEW DELHI: Virat Kohli can fulfil his dream of finally winning the Indian Premier League when the playoffs begin this week, desperate to banish the "heartbreak" of losing the final as captain nine years ago.
Kohli's Royal Challengers Bengaluru face table-toppers Punjab Kings on Thursday in Mullanpur after securing second place by chasing 228 to beat Lucknow Super Giants on Tuesday. The winners go straight into the final in Ahmedabad on June 3.
But even if Bengaluru lose that encounter, they will have another chance to reach the final against the winners of Friday's "eliminator" between Gujarat Titans and Mumbai Indians. The 36-year-old Kohli recently retired from Tests having already walked away from T20 internationals after India's World Cup triumph last year.
But the hunger to lift the IPL trophy still burns bright for the two-time World Cup winner, who played a leading part in India's 50-over Champions Trophy victory earlier this year. "I had two heartbreaks in my life in 2016," Kohli told Indian broadcaster JioStar. "First was the World T20 and then the IPL final."
Affectionately known as "King Kohli", he has scored more runs than anyone in IPL history and is the only player to have spent all 18 seasons of the league with one team since its inception in 2008.
He has been on the losing side in the final three times, in 2009, 2011 and 2016, but fans believe that it is an omen that Kohli wears number 18 on his shirt -- and that it will be 18th time lucky this year.
He has been in vintage form as he pursues his goal: his 54 on Tuesday that set up victory against Lucknow was his eighth half-century of a season in which he has made 602 runs at an average of 60.20.
Hazlewood return
A delay to the season caused by the conflict with Pakistan means some overseas players will be missing from the playoffs including Gujarat's Jos Buttler, who has international commitments with England. But Australia pace bowler Josh Hazlewood returned to the Bengaluru squad on Sunday and is expected to play on Thursday, having left when the IPL was suspended on May 9.
There had been doubts over his return because of a shoulder niggle and the playoffs clashing with preparations for Australia's World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's on June 11.
Punjab will be without left-arm quick bowler Marco Jansen, who has left to join South Africa's training camp ahead of the Test showpiece. "Every team's missing players," Punjab head coach Ricky Ponting said. "We'd like to think we've got good depth, and be able to cover for Marco, despite it being a big miss."
Five-time champions Mumbai, led by Hardik Pandya, seem to have been the worst hit by the extended schedule overlapping with the international calendar. They have lost England's Will Jacks and the South African duo of Ryan Rickelton and Corbin Bosch for their eliminator against Gujarat. The Titans, IPL champions on their debut in 2022, have a formidable batting line-up even without Buttler.
Skipper Shubman Gill, who has taken over from the retired Rohit Sharma as Test captain, and fellow opener Sai Sudharsan are the top two on this season's batting charts, with 679 and 649 runs respectively. Gill will take charge of India for the first time when they embark on a five-Test tour of England, starting at Headingley, Leeds, on June 20. – AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
11 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
In Luis Enrique's new-look PSG, coach is the superstar
Former Spain boss puts transformed club on date with glory PARIS: In the new-look Paris Saint-Germain side which has made it to this weekend's Champions League final, the superstar is no longer on the pitch but instead in the dugout. In transforming a team not always taken seriously by their rivals into arguably the most feared side on the continent, PSG coach Luis Enrique has also revived his own reputation after being sacked from his previous job. Now 55, Luis Enrique was appointed in July 2023, just after Lionel Messi left the French side following an underwhelming two-year spell. Neymar then departed later that summer. The former Barcelona boss was dismissed by Spain six months earlier after their disappointing exit from the 2022 World Cup to Morocco in the last 16. The PSG job appeared something of a poisoned chalice, with his predecessors unable to deliver the success in the Champions League that the club's Qatari owners desired. The team was handicapped by the presence of Neymar, Messi and Kylian Mbappe all together, three great forwards who naturally did not much care for defending. With the first two gone and Mbappe's eventual departure inevitable, Luis Enrique understood he would be allowed time to mold a team in his shape. 'We are in the middle of building a new identity, our own style and way of playing, and a new culture,' PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifi said early last season, adding that winning the Champions League was no longer 'something we are obsessed with'. Last year they still reached the semi-finals in Europe before losing to Borussia Dortmund -- with a domestic league and cup double also in the bag, it was a promising start for the new coach. The problem was that Mbappe, with his contract expiring, was on the way out. Yet the manager kept insisting PSG would be better without their all-time top scorer. 'If everything goes well I'm convinced we'll have a much better team than this year,' Luis Enrique said in February 2024. It was hard to believe at the time, even less so after PSG opted last summer not to sign a new striker. Luis Enrique insists on playing a style of football characterized by dominating possession as well as high-octane pressing. But his critics have accused him of being stubborn and rigidly sticking to one way of playing, even when it is not working. 'Luis Enrique had a very clear game plan, and when plan A didn't work, there was no plan B,' Spain's Iago Aspas said of his former coach. Better without Mbappe Earlier this season PSG were dominating games but not scoring, and Luis Enrique's refusal to play with a traditional center-forward appeared mistaken. When one interviewer questioned his tactics following a defeat to Arsenal, the coach's response seemed arrogant and unpleasant. 'I have no intention of explaining my tactics to you. You wouldn't understand,' he said. A defeat against Bayern Munich in November left PSG in danger of going out of the Champions League early, but the turnaround since has been remarkable. His energetic young side suffocated Manchester City before they saw off Liverpool, Aston Villa and Arsenal in a triumphant tour of England. The decision to play without a recognized number nine? No problem. Instead he turned winger Ousmane Dembele into a lethal finisher with 33 goals this season. PSG really are better without Mbappe, and Luis Enrique deserves huge credit for that. Now he is one game away from joining an elite group of coaches to have won the Champions League twice. His last success was in 2015 when he led a Barcelona side spearheaded by Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez to the title. 'Getting to a Champions League final is always difficult. All players and coaches dream of it, but not everyone gets there,' said the Asturian. 'The job I did at Barca was extraordinary. Even if people said it was easy to win the Champions League with that team, it wasn't.' After three years at Barcelona he had two spells in charge of Spain, taking a time out in 2019 when his daughter Xana died of bone cancer. Now he believes the experience of those years has helped him become a better coach in Paris. 'I have more experience now. I remember before my first final I was really stressed,' he said. 'This time I hope to transmit a message of calm. Otherwise I think I have learnt from my mistakes and that has helped me get where I am now.' — AFP

Kuwait Times
a day ago
- Kuwait Times
Kohli primed to banish years of heartache in IPL playoffs
NEW DELHI: Virat Kohli can fulfil his dream of finally winning the Indian Premier League when the playoffs begin this week, desperate to banish the "heartbreak" of losing the final as captain nine years ago. Kohli's Royal Challengers Bengaluru face table-toppers Punjab Kings on Thursday in Mullanpur after securing second place by chasing 228 to beat Lucknow Super Giants on Tuesday. The winners go straight into the final in Ahmedabad on June 3. But even if Bengaluru lose that encounter, they will have another chance to reach the final against the winners of Friday's "eliminator" between Gujarat Titans and Mumbai Indians. The 36-year-old Kohli recently retired from Tests having already walked away from T20 internationals after India's World Cup triumph last year. But the hunger to lift the IPL trophy still burns bright for the two-time World Cup winner, who played a leading part in India's 50-over Champions Trophy victory earlier this year. "I had two heartbreaks in my life in 2016," Kohli told Indian broadcaster JioStar. "First was the World T20 and then the IPL final." Affectionately known as "King Kohli", he has scored more runs than anyone in IPL history and is the only player to have spent all 18 seasons of the league with one team since its inception in 2008. He has been on the losing side in the final three times, in 2009, 2011 and 2016, but fans believe that it is an omen that Kohli wears number 18 on his shirt -- and that it will be 18th time lucky this year. He has been in vintage form as he pursues his goal: his 54 on Tuesday that set up victory against Lucknow was his eighth half-century of a season in which he has made 602 runs at an average of 60.20. Hazlewood return A delay to the season caused by the conflict with Pakistan means some overseas players will be missing from the playoffs including Gujarat's Jos Buttler, who has international commitments with England. But Australia pace bowler Josh Hazlewood returned to the Bengaluru squad on Sunday and is expected to play on Thursday, having left when the IPL was suspended on May 9. There had been doubts over his return because of a shoulder niggle and the playoffs clashing with preparations for Australia's World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's on June 11. Punjab will be without left-arm quick bowler Marco Jansen, who has left to join South Africa's training camp ahead of the Test showpiece. "Every team's missing players," Punjab head coach Ricky Ponting said. "We'd like to think we've got good depth, and be able to cover for Marco, despite it being a big miss." Five-time champions Mumbai, led by Hardik Pandya, seem to have been the worst hit by the extended schedule overlapping with the international calendar. They have lost England's Will Jacks and the South African duo of Ryan Rickelton and Corbin Bosch for their eliminator against Gujarat. The Titans, IPL champions on their debut in 2022, have a formidable batting line-up even without Buttler. Skipper Shubman Gill, who has taken over from the retired Rohit Sharma as Test captain, and fellow opener Sai Sudharsan are the top two on this season's batting charts, with 679 and 649 runs respectively. Gill will take charge of India for the first time when they embark on a five-Test tour of England, starting at Headingley, Leeds, on June 20. – AFP

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Rugged Acerbi, the symbol of Inter's bid to make history
MILAN: Francesco Acerbi could crown his long, turbulent career with the biggest prize in club football after bouncing back from cancer, depression and alcoholism to play a key part in Inter Milan's charge to the Champions League final. The Italy international's stoppage-time equalizer was probably the defining moment in Inter's barely believable semi-final triumph over Barcelona, as the oldest player in an old team. A 37-year-old center-back, Acerbi had to be the most surprising goalscorer in a tie for the ages, finding himself in the opposition penalty area to smash in his first ever Champions League goal just as the game looked up for Inter. Everything about his goal embodied the fighting spirit Inter have shown in their two classic wins over Barca and, in the previous round, Bayern Munich. Acerbi hammered home Denzel Dumfries' low cross with his unfavored right foot which was wearing a boot with a hole in it, before stripping off to reveal a rangy body covered with tattoos. The somewhat rustic image contrasted with slick, youthful Barca led by teenage phenomenon Lamine Yamal. "It was a really special moment. I could feel that something changed when the ball hit the net," said Inter midfielder Hakan Calhanoglu on Monday. "It was the moment that we realised that we could win the match." Despite his age, Acerbi is Simone Inzaghi's first choice in the heart of Inter's three-man central defense and will start against paris Saint-Germain in Munich on Saturday. Acerbi has come through some tough times both on the field and off it, battling depression following the death of his father while he was briefly at AC Milan over a decade ago, and then two bouts of testicular cancer which he believes were the catalyst for him to turn his life around. 'Rock bottom' "After my dad died I crashed and hit rock bottom. I was at Milan and nothing stimulated me. I didn't even know how to play anymore," he said in 2019. "I started drinking, I drank everything. Cancer saved me. I had something to fight against again, something to overcome. "I asked myself, 'what do you do if it comes back?' and I decided that I would face it again. I saw things clearly and I know that from one day to the next, everything could change. I'd even say that the disease improved me... I stopped dreaming, I prefer now to set myself achievable goals." One of those targets was the Italy team, which he reached at the age of 31 when -- after couple of friendly appearances earlier in his career -- he played his first official Azzurri match against Finland in September 2019, netting his one and only internation goal against Bosnia and Herzegovina two months later. Acerbi has been rewarded for his memorable season by a recall to the Italy set-up for upcoming World Cup qualifiers against Norway and Moldova, a first call-up since March last year. But he was forced to leave his last Azzurri training camp after allegations that he racially abused Juan Jesus during a highly-charged match between Inter and Napoli. Acerbi was spared punishment by the Italian football federation (FIGC) due a lack of evidence, the disciplinary authorities saying that "the discriminatory content... seems to have been perceived only by the offended player". Napoli were so outraged at the decision that they pulled out of the FIGC's "purely cosmetic" anti-racism initiatives, while Jesus felt "bitter" about the decision which saved Acerbi from a 10-match ban that would have ended his season right before Euro 2024. Acerbi ended up missing the Euros with injury, and hamstring problems dogged him during the first half of this season, but he has come roaring back and could yet lead Inter to an era-defining triumph. – AFP