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'Lucky' Lynn cashes in after freak reprieve

Free-wheeling Queenslander was ready to put it all on red after a stunning incident in the Indian Premier League

Chris Lynn was tempted to visit a casino to cash in on his luck after a miraculous reprieve while batting during the Kolkata Knight Riders' Indian Premier League victory over the Rajasthan Royals.

Lynn was on 13 when he inside-edged a delivery from paceman Dhawan Kulkarni onto his stumps and started walking off without bothering to look behind.

Kulkarni was celebrating too, but it was soon cut short when the bowler realised that the ball had lit up the zing bails yet failed to dislodge them, ricocheting off the leg stump to the fine-leg boundary for a four instead.

Image Id: C9A7FA4C8F5A4531BE9E22B9EB937CC8 Image Caption: Chris Lynn's lucky let-off // Star Sports

Lynn went on to score 50 off 32 deliveries in Kolkata's successful eight-wicket win chasing Rajasthan's 3-139 that put them at the top of the IPL table with four wins from five matches.

"I always like to ride my luck," the 28-year-old Queenslander said.

"I inside-edged it, and then I heard a second noise. I thought (the wicketkeeper) might catch it or the bails might come off, but I got lucky.

"I might actually go the casino tonight!"

It was the third time in this year's IPL that a batsman had benefited from the bails refusing to be dislodged.

Rajasthan were also on the receiving end in an earlier match when Jofra Archer's delivery rolled onto the stumps but Chennai Super Kings captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, yet to open his account, survived as bails could not be dislodged.

Dhoni, who went on to make a match-winning 75 off 46 deliveries, suffered the heartbreak himself on the weekend when bails did not fall despite his direct hit with Punjab opener Lokesh Rahul short of his ground.

Rajasthan captain Ajinkya Rahane appeared as bewildered as the bowler and was involved in a long conversation with the on-field umpire after the Lynn incident.

"The rules are what they are, but I told the umpire, at least don't declare it a boundary," Rahane said.

"It's already so tough for the bowlers in T20, and in such a situation, a ball can, maybe, declared a dead ball. That was my conversation with the umpires."