Mumbai hunted down a target of 201 with six wickets in hand but the margin alone does not tell you how sharply the game turned in the final overs. It was there, once again, that Punjab lost control. They missed lengths, their plans were all over the place and a total that had felt competitive quickly slipped out of their hands.
The chase began with clarity. Ryan Rickelton ensured there was no early scoreboard pressure, taking advantage of the fielding restrictions with a 23-ball 48. He trusted the bounce early, drove on the up and pulled anything that sat up, helping Mumbai to 59 without loss in the Powerplay.
Punjab did find a way to drag the game back. The pitch still held enough to make strokeplay uncertain, and for a phase, Mumbai’s chase seemed to lose its initial fluency. Wickets fell, the required rate climbed, and the innings threatened to tilt away.
That is when Tilak Varma took ownership of the chase. His unbeaten 75 off 33 balls was not just about power; it was also about timing the ac-celeration. He did not force the issue early in his stay, instead allowing the game to settle before picking his moments.
Even then, the game was not entirely in Mumbai’s control while entering the final stretch. Punjab had an opening, much like they have had in recent matches. What followed, though, was a familiar unraveling.
Will Jacks ensured there would be no late twist. His unbeaten 25 off 10 balls turned the chase into something closer to a heist. Interestingly, Mumbai Indians were led by Jasprit Bumrah in this match, making them the first team in IPL history to have three different Indian captains in a single season.
The death overs told the story Punjab would rather not revisit. It meant that a fifth consecutive loss followed, each one beginning to resemble the last. The scrutiny on Shreyas Iyer, already intense, will only grow sharper after another game where control slipped late.
For Mumbai, there was also a subplot that might carry forward. Jasprit Bumrah began his stint as captain with a win, and while this was just one game, it hinted at a different kind of narrative taking shape.
Earlier, Punjab Kings arrived at 200/8 almost in spite of how the innings unfolded. Mumbai’s mid-innings discipline, led by Shardul Thakur, saw Punjab lose wickets in clusters. Thakur returned with figures of 4/39.