Hayden Analyzes GT's "Heartbreaking" Loss to RR: Wickets, Run-Outs, and Rhythm

Gujarat Titans batting coach Matthew Hayden pinpointed a sudden collapse of four wickets for ten runs as the turning point in a heartbreaking six-run loss to Rajasthan Royals. He noted that key bowlers like Mohammed Siraj, Kagiso Rabada, and Rashid Khan were slightly off their rhythm, contributing to RR's high total. Hayden also highlighted a critical run-out involving Shahrukh Khan and Rashid as a decisive moment in the failed chase. Despite strong cameos from Rashid Khan and Rabada at the death, the early damage proved insurmountable.

Key Points: Matthew Hayden Dissects GT's Narrow Loss to Rajasthan Royals

  • Rapid wicket collapse cost GT the game
  • Bowlers lacked rhythm and line
  • Run-out decision proved costly
  • Cameos from Rashid & Rabada fell short
3 min read

'Losing quick wickets, bowlers lacked rhythm': Hayden dissects GT's narrow loss to RR

GT batting coach Matthew Hayden explains how quick wickets and bowler rhythm led to a heartbreaking 6-run defeat against RR in the IPL.

"The game was absolutely in the bag. - Matthew Hayden"

Ahmedabad, April 5

Gujarat Titans batting coach Matthew Hayden believes a sudden flurry of wickets turned a certain victory into a "heartbreaking" loss against the Rajasthan Royals. Chasing a target of 211, GT were well-placed at many points. After ten overs, they were 103 for 1. But then Ravi Bishnoi changed the game as the hosts went from 107 for 1 in the 11th over to 161/7 in the 15th.

In the final few overs, Rashid Khan (24), who stepped in to lead the side after skipper Shubman Gill missed the game due to a muscle spasm, and Kagiso Rabada (23) almost pulled off a run-chase with their cameos, however, it wasn't enough as GT fell short by just six runs.

"I think we lost four for ten in that period. The game was absolutely in the bag. Washi Sundar had a pretty big decision to make at that point around if you're going to attack someone like Bishnoi, who was on a roll, especially after the dismissal. That was maybe a choice that he can look at and will look at as well in terms of just trying to be a little bit more cohesive in our run chases, because it has to be said there wasn't a lot that went wrong in those first 12 overs. There was plenty of great stuff," Hayden said at the press conference after the game.

"The run out was something that, again, was a decision which Shahrukh and Rashid had to make at the time. I haven't broken down that play because as a coach you tend to kind of look at the ball, but I'll be interested also to see the approach when we get back to vision of how that run was executed. It certainly looked from the sideline that Jaddu bumped the ball quite a long way away from him and to regather, as we know, he's so quick and he's so good at getting and releasing the ball," he added.

"But there's two wickets straightaway that would have been the difference. Again, we're talking about six runs. So those little things in T20 cricket, when you're chasing down a big total, which we were, they become vital in the decision-making process of a batting unit."

Earlier, bowling first, Rabada picked up two wickets, while Mohammed Siraj, Ashok Sharma, Prasidh Krishna andRashid chipped in with one scalp each to restrict the Rajasthan Royals to 210/6.

Hayden, however, admitted that key bowlers like Mohammed Siraj, Rabada and Rashid little bit off their rhythm. "I felt like a lot of our bowlers were just a little bit off their rhythm and their line in particular. KG Rabada's figures, I think, were a bit more expensive than perhaps what he bowled today. I thought he was actually pretty good and same too with Rashid.

"Siraj had an off day, simple as that. When we reviewed his pitch map, he was a little bit too short, a little bit too wide, and that's just a great bowler just having an off day. Whereas I thought Rashid actually could have had a much better day. It could have been a couple more wickets in the wicket column and so too with KG Rabada as well.

"If anything, KG bowled a little bit of a leg-stumpy line, back of a length. And short-of-a-length, good-length balls tended to be a fraction wide of off stump. But we're splitting hairs in many ways. Batters have the intent now to score quickly," he said.

The loss was GT's second game in a row this season, joining Kolkata Knight Riders and Chennai Super Kings to have that record.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Hayden's analysis is spot on. It's the small moments that decide these close games. That run-out between Shahrukh and Rashid, and those four quick wickets... in a chase of 210+, you can't afford such lapses. Bowling was also not at its best, Siraj had a rare off day.
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Aditya G
Respectfully, I think the coaching staff needs to share some blame. When you lose 4 wickets for 10 runs, it's not just player error; it's about the plan and mindset going into that phase. The batting order looked shaky without Gill's anchoring presence.
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Sarah B
What a fightback from Rashid and Rabada at the end though! Shows the never-say-die spirit. It was so close. As Hayden said, just six runs. This is why IPL is the best T20 league in the world - every match is a thriller.
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Karthik V
The real issue was the bowling first up. 210 is always a tough chase. If your star bowlers like Siraj and Rabada are "off their rhythm," you're giving the opposition a 15-20 run head start. Need to bounce back strong in the next match. 💪
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Nisha Z
Feel for the GT fans. Two losses in a row now. The team has the talent but seems to be lacking that finishing killer instinct. Hopefully, this narrow loss acts as a wake-up call. Onwards and upwards!

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