Raghuvanshi's 51 off 29 had KKR purring at the halfway mark. The left-hander attacked the powerplay relentlessly, finding the gaps against Mumbai's new-ball bowlers and building momentum that should have been decisive. By over 10, KKR looked poised for 230-plus. But the moment Raghuvanshi miscued Hardik Pandya to mid-off in the 15th over, the chase shifted. KKR's acceleration stalled. Two runs came off Lasith Malinga's next over. Suddenly, 220 felt beatable.
Ryan Rickelton seized that opening ruthlessly. Walking in at number three, the South African took guard and went after KKR's death bowlers without hesitation. His 81 off 43 — a strike rate of 188 — forced Mumbai's chase into overdrive. Every boundary tilted the equation. When Rickelton pulled Varun Chakaravarthy for six in the 16th over, Mumbai needed just 29 off 24. The momentum had flipped completely.
Rohit's composed 78 off 38 anchored the chase brilliantly, but it was Rickelton's aggression that set the tone. KKR's bowlers, particularly in overs 15-18, couldn't find their lines against him. They tried short balls, slower deliveries, yorkers — nothing stuck. By the time Rickelton fell in the 18th, the match was Mumbai's to lose. One run off the final over sealed it. The turning point wasn't one moment — it was Raghuvanshi's departure ending KKR's dominance and Rickelton's arrival heralding Mumbai's.