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Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) fast bowler Lockie Ferguson's superb performance in Super Over decider not only ensured a win for SunRisers Hyderabad (SRH) on Sunday, but it ended his jinx in the Indian Premier League (IPL).
In 2017, after arriving for his first IPL at Rising Pune Supergiant, the right-arm pacer got bedridden for two weeks due to fever and lost six kilograms. Then he played a game in severe heat and was laid low for a further week due to another bug.
Ferguson's next IPL stint, last year, was poor. In five games he could pick just two wickets.
However, in the 2019 World Cup, he emerged as the second-highest wicket-taker which catapulted him into the league of big guns.
On Sunday, when he got David Warner out in the Super Over, he had replicated the delivery on his international debut, an ODI in December 2016.
Only that Warner missed it while he tried to guide the away-going one behind stumps again as against the one in that 2016 ODI which he chopped on to his stumps.
"I think getting David Warner out especially at the start of the super over," said Ferguson when asked about his favourite wicket after Sunday's match. "I had my plan which was working throughout the game."
"I have been training a lot hard, feeling pretty comfortable, haven't played in a while so I was pretty nervous," the right-arm pace bowler said in a video on IPLT20.com while talking to teammate Shubman Gill.
"I try to keep it simple with what I was doing throughout the game. I backed my yorker and backed my slower ball, fortunately got my wickets, which is always nice," he added.
Ferguson, like others, is coming without any competitive cricket due to Covid-induced lockdown, his last match coming on 13 March when New Zealand lost to Australia in Sydney.
According to a report in Stuff.co.nz, Ferguson had to confine himself to a hotel room in Abu Dhabi for about a week ahead of IPL with just a skipping rope to train with.
Skipping, sets of 100 squats, burpees, and push-ups comprised the training regimen devised by New Zealand's strength and conditioning coach Chris Donaldson.
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