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Islamabad United reach PSL final beating Karachi Kings by 8 wickets


Luke Ronchi didn't particularly need to do too much on Sunday to be in contention for player of the tournament, but he almost sealed that award with a blistering inning - by far the most devastating one in the tournament's short history. Ninety-four were smashed off 39 balls, 78 off which came through boundaries as Islamabad romped to their second final. The margin of victory in terms of balls remaining (45) was the biggest in the tournament.
Karachi looked to bowl at Ronchi's body without a square leg in place, and he dispatched three boundaries off the first over by Mohammad Amir to set the wheels in motion. The Powerplay was just an inexorable tidal wave of fours and sixes, with no bowler allowed a spell of more than one over, such command did Ronchi have over every one of them. 
Sixty-nine were carted off the first five overs as he raced to the fastest-ever PSL 50 - off just 19 balls, and the contest was over embarrassingly quickly. Sahibzada Farhan, and later Alex Hales and Samit Patel provided able support, but the day was all about Ronchi, who sealed his side's place in next Sunday's final with aplomb.

Karachi may rue a strangely conservative batting performance. They didn't look to attack till the 14-over mark. That was especially troubling given Eoin Morgan, who elected to bat, assessed the pitch as "excellent to bat on." Even though Colin Ingram injected urgency with a strokeful half-century, they were well behind the par score. Seventy-three came off the last six, thanks largely to Ingram's 29-ball 68. Yet, it never felt enough.

From the start, Karachi's strategy - if indeed that's what it was - looked odd. Joe Denly and Khurram Manzoor spent the first over blocking and nudging Samit Patel. Okay, that was Patel, and he has been dangerous early on. Yes, they lost two early wickets, but even that couldn't explain the decision to persist with that strategy up until the 14th over. 
This meant they were at least 30 runs behind par, with virtually no chance of making all that up at the death. Ronchi's innings wasn't a flash in the pan either; he's been at his belligerent best all tournament so they would have been aware of the need for a big total. Whether they got their tactics wrong is a valid question to ask of Karachi.

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