
MS Dhoni came off as the hero in yet another chilling-thrilling CSK vs MI drama, as he earned a late, final-over victory to extend Mumbai Indians’ losing skid in IPL 2022 to seven games. MS Dhoni finished with an unbeaten 28 off 13 balls, 16 of which came off the final four balls of the run chase, putting an end to MI’s dreams of a first-innings victory.
CSK vs MI: The bone-chilling final over
With 16 balls to go, Jaydev Unadkat dismissed Dwaine Pretorius on the first ball, and Dwayne Bravo handed the strike to Dhoni on the second. Unadkat made a length error while attempting to go full and wide, resulting in a ball in the slot that Dhoni struck for a straight six. On the next delivery, the left-arm pacer picked up the pace and went short, but Dhoni anticipated this and camped back, pulling it to the square leg barrier, reducing the chase to 6 off 2 balls. Dhoni finished it off with a whip of the wrists on a low full ball that beat the short fine leg fielder to the fence.
CSK vs MI: How did MI reach the total?
The first ball of the innings was cut to point by Ruturaj Gaikwad, Mitchell Santner at no.3 didn’t last through the third over, and Ambati Rayudu’s first runs were a couple of sixes off Daniel Sams and Jasprit Bumrah. CSK reached 38 for 2 in the PowerPlay after Robin Uthappa settled them down with a couple of fours.
Neither team could acquire a complete hold on the game, which was entertaining. Uthappa attempted a post-PP comeback by hitting rookie Hrithik Shokeen for six, but Unadkat returned in the ninth over to dismiss the opener with a well-timed off-cutter that Uthappa drove to the deep square leg fielder.
Shivam Dube arrived with his clean-hitting talent in tow and promptly smacked Riley Meredith for a beautiful offside six. Just as he and Rayudu appeared to be the team to lead the chase from that moment on, Dube’s stay was cut short by an Ishan Kishan stunner behind the stumps.
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CSK vs MI: MI’s awful start

In the first over, Mukesh Choudhary had Rohit Sharma flicking to mid-on and Ishan Kishan playing down the incorrect line, removing his off stump. Mukesh struck for the third time in the PowerPlay when Dewald Brevis nicked to MS Dhoni for four runs two overs later. MI lost three wickets, but it could have been worse if CSK had held on to chances such as a stumping by Dhoni and a catch by Ravindra Jadeja, giving Suryakumar Yadav a couple of reprieves.
To a little extent, yes. Suryakumar got a couple of cover drives going in the thick of the chaos to ease MI’s nerves, but an expansive attempt at a slog sweep from outside the off-stump against Mitchell Santner ended his bid to resurrect his side. In the eighth over, he was bowled for 32 runs off 21 balls, leaving MI’s batting fate in the hands of Tilak Varma and rookie Hrithik Shoukeen.
CSK vs MI: How did MI get to 155 amidst batting damage?

Kieron Pollard was trapped by one of CSK’s oldest gimmicks, a fielder at a long stop for the big West Indian to hit straight to, which had worked in the IPL 2010 final. It worked again tonight, and MI’s chances of a strong finish were dwindling.
In the following over, Daniel Sams was stumped by Dwayne Bravo’s slower one, further denting MI’s chances, but Unadkat stepped up for a cameo of 19 off 9 balls. During his quick-fire stand with Unadkat, Varma reached his second IPL half-century, while MI scored 29 runs off Dwaine Pretorius and Bravo’s last two overs. Dhoni chose to turn back the clocks after that late effort failed.
MI vs CSK: Brief Scores
Brief Scores: Mumbai Indians 155/7 in 20 overs (Tilak Varma 51*, Suryakumar Yadav 32; Mukesh Choudhary 3-19, Dwayne Bravo 2-36) lost the match to Chennai Super Kings 156/7 in 20 overs (Ambati Rayudu 40, Robin Uthappa 30, MS Dhoni 28*; Daniel Sams 4-30) by 3 wickets