The
little-known opener smashed five sixes and eight fours in his quickfire 48-ball
89 as Kolkata surpassed Chennai's total of 190-3 with two balls to spare at the
Chidambaram stadium in Chennai.
Kolkata
needed nine runs to win off the last over bowled by West Indies seamer Dwayne
Bravo, but Manoj Tiwary (nine not out) smashed the third and fourth deliveries
for fours to spark celebrations in his team's camp.
Kolkata's
other batting star was South African Jacques Kallis, who made a crucial 49-ball
69 with the help of one six and seven fours despite suffering a hamstring
injury in the later part of his knock.
"Mission
accomplished," said Kolkata skipper Gautam Gambhir.
"Chasing
191 against the defending champions in their backyard shows the character of
Bisla. It proves a captain is only as good as his team."
Man-of-the-match
Bisla and Kallis put on 136 runs for the second wicket in 13.4 overs before
Tiwary and Bangladesh all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan (11 not out) completed the
win to deny two-time champions Chennai a hat-trick.
"Bisla
and Kallis got the partnership Kolkata needed," said Chennai captain
Mahendra Singh Dhoni.
"I
think the ball started coming on slightly better in the second half but under
the conditions, we batted well. Our bowlers were not getting the reverse
swing."
Australian
paceman Ben Hilfenhaus bagged two wickets for Chennai, who were facing
elimination at one stage of the tournament.
Chennai were
lucky to figure in the play-offs, having qualified on better net run-rate than
that of Royal Challengers Bangalore after both the teams finished their league
engagements with 17 points.
The final
was also watched by Pakistan's cricket chief Zaka Ashraf. Pakistani players,
who are usually a major draw in India, have been kept out of the tournament
after the first edition, reportedly due to security fears.
Suresh Raina
earlier cracked a 38-ball 73 with five sixes to help Chennai set a stiff
target. Australian Michael Hussey (54), who turned 37 on Sunday, and Murali
Vijay (42) were the other main scorers.
Chennai made
a brisk start after electing to bat as Hussey put on 87 for the opening wicket
with Vijay and then 73 for the second wicket with Raina.
Raina raced
to his half-century off just 27 balls before falling off the last ball of the
innings, caught by Australian Brett Lee in the deep off Shakib.
Kolkata got
$2 million for the win while runners-up Chennai bagged $1.5 million.
Kolkata,
Chennai and Delhi Daredevils qualified for the Champions League to be held in
India in October between the top domestic Twenty20 clubs from around the world.
Brief
scores:
Chennai Super Kings 190-3 in 20 overs (S. Raina 73, M. Hussey 54, M. Vijay
42) lost to Kolkata Knight Riders 192-5 in 19.4 overs (M. Bisla 89, J. Kallis
69; B. Hilfenhaus 2-25) by five wickets.