IPL 2019: The Last Ball. The Yorker. Forever
IPL 2019: Malinga’s Yorker and One Run of Separation — Mumbai Do It Again in the Most Malinga Way Possible
There are cricket moments that stay with you. Not just because of what happened, but because of the weight of what was at stake when it happened. The last ball of the IPL 2019 final. CSK at 148/7, needing 2 runs off the final delivery to win the title. Lasith Malinga — 35 years old, running in off his short-hop approach, that extraordinary round-arm action — marking his run-up.
What happened next lasted approximately half a second. The ball arrowed into the base of the off stump. Shardul Thakur’s attempted drive missed completely. The stumps scattered. CSK 148/7. Mumbai Indians won by 1 run. For the second time in three years. For the fourth time overall.
If there is a deity of T20 last-ball drama, it probably looks exactly like Lasith Malinga.
David Warner: Hunger Renewed, Nothing Lost
David Warner had missed the entire 2018 IPL season due to his ball-tampering ban. The world watched his return to professional cricket wondering: would the fire still be there? Would a year away from the game, and all the controversy that came with it, have taken something?
692 runs. Orange Cap. Average of 69. Strike rate of 143. The answer was an emphatic, unambiguous no. Warner came back to IPL 2019 not just as good as before — if anything, better. His hunger, always formidable, appeared sharpened by absence. His partnership with Jonny Bairstow at the top of SRH’s order was one of 2019’s great batting pleasures: Warner’s power complemented by Bairstow’s technique and placement, two completely different opening styles making each other better.
SRH’s powerplays with Warner and Bairstow together were the best in the tournament. Their partnership was worth approximately 15–20 runs above the tournament average per game — a direct consequence of two elite openers whose styles complemented rather than replicated each other.
Imran Tahir: Cricket’s Most Joyful Human Being, Purple Cap in Hand
If cricket has a face it should show to the world to explain why the sport creates pure, uncontrollable joy — Imran Tahir’s celebration after a wicket is that face. The South African leg-spinner, born in Pakistan, playing T20 cricket into his forties with the enthusiasm of a teenager who has just played his first match, takes a wicket and then runs. Not jogs. Sprints. Arms out, face lit up with something that goes beyond happiness — pure, unconstrained, completely authentic delight.
In IPL 2019, he took 26 wickets for Chennai Super Kings to win the Purple Cap at the age of 40. His leg-spin — well-flighted, sharply turning, varied in trajectory and pace in ways that made batters who thought they’d read him suddenly discover they hadn’t — was beautifully effective throughout the season. And after every single wicket, that celebration. Every time like the first time.
In an era of brand management and carefully curated public images, Tahir’s authentic, uncontrolled joy was genuinely refreshing. Cricket needed more of it. It still does.
| Imran Tahir at 40: Purple Cap, 26 wickets, and the best celebration in cricket. Age didn’t slow the leg, and nothing dimmed the smile. |
The Final: When Malinga Did What Malinga Always Does
Mumbai Indians vs Chennai Super Kings in the final at Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad. The IPL’s two greatest franchises, again. MI’s 149/8 looked slightly below par — enough to defend, but requiring excellence from the bowling attack.
CSK’s chase was controlled until it wasn’t. Boundaries came, then slowed. Wickets fell at the wrong moments. In the final over, with CSK needing 9 off 6 balls, Dhoni came in — the greatest finisher in T20 history, in a situation he had won from before. Malinga was bowling. The world genuinely didn’t know what was going to happen.
CSK needed 2 off the last ball. Shardul Thakur was on strike — a lower-order batter in a desperate situation. Malinga’s yorker didn’t miss. It never missed when it mattered. CSK finished on 148/7. One run short. MI won their fourth title. And Malinga had delivered his final, perfect, irreplaceable contribution to Mumbai Indians’ history.
Intelligence Corner: The Yorker as Match-Winner
Malinga’s career economy rate in the final over of T20 innings was extraordinary — the product of tens of thousands of practice deliveries across decades of professional cricket. In high-pressure death situations (overs 18–20), bowlers who consistently execute yorkers win significantly more match-deciding moments than those who bowl back-of-a-length. Malinga’s last-ball wicket in the 2019 final was the ultimate validation of this principle: the greatest pressure delivery in IPL final history, bowled by the greatest death-over bowler the format has seen.
Season 2019 — Quick Stats
| Stat | Detail |
| Champion | Mumbai Indians (4th title) |
| Runner-Up | Chennai Super Kings |
| Final Result | MI won by 1 run (MI 149/8, CSK 148/7) |
| Final Venue | Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad |
| Orange Cap | David Warner (SRH) — 692 runs (comeback season) |
| Purple Cap | Imran Tahir (CSK) — 26 wickets at age 40 |
| Decisive Moment | Malinga’s last-ball yorker dismissing Shardul Thakur LBW |
| Note | MI’s second 1-run final win in 3 years (also 2017) |
Frequently Asked Questions — IPL 2019
Q: Who won IPL 2019?
A: Mumbai Indians won by 1 run — their second 1-run final victory in three years (also in 2017). It was their fourth IPL title overall. Malinga bowled the decisive last-ball yorker to dismiss Shardul Thakur LBW.
Q: How did Malinga win the 2019 final for Mumbai?
A: With CSK needing 2 runs off the last ball, Malinga bowled a perfect yorker that hit the base of the off stump. Shardul Thakur’s drive missed completely. CSK finished 148/7, one run short. MI won by 1 run.
Q: How many IPL titles have Mumbai Indians won?
A: Mumbai Indians have won five IPL titles — in 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, and 2020. They are one of only two franchises (along with CSK) to win five titles.
Q: Who won the Purple Cap in IPL 2019?
A: Imran Tahir of CSK took 26 wickets to win the Purple Cap at the age of 40. His wicket celebrations — a full sprint across the outfield, arms wide — became one of cricket’s most beloved images.

