Madhya Pradesh's pace spearhead Kuldeep Sen unleashed a searing spell to dismantle Jammu and Kashmir for 194 on day 1 of their
Ranji Trophy quarter-final at Holkar Stadium on Friday, handing the hosts a firm upper hand on a batsman-friendly surface.
At stumps, Madhya Pradesh was 28 for no wicket.
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Sen's maiden five-for of the tournament—built on pace and raw hostility—proved the trigger for J&K's batting implosion. The lanky quick wasted no time, shattering the top order with 2 swift strikes: Yawer Hassan (13) edged behind, and Shubham Pundir (1) was trapped lbw by a snorter.
J&K openers Shubham Khajuria (60) and captain Paras Dogra (33) mounted a recovery, dead-batting their way through probing spells with admirable resolve.
But MP's attack, marshalled smartly, refused to relent. Left-arm spinner Kumar Kartikeya, hero of the last league match against Maharashtra, struck gold, luring Khajuria into a fatal prod that Rajat Patidar snapped up at slip.
Moments later, Sen returned to the attack, drawing a faint nick from Dogra off a lifter—initially given not out, but third umpire technology confirmed the downfall to Mantri's delight.
Kartikeya piled on the misery, exploiting reckless charges from Kanhaiya Wadhawan and Abid Mushtaq to bag a brace and deepen the hole.
Enter tailender Yudhvir Singh, whose explosive 41 — punctuated by 3 towering sixes — briefly ignited the crowd.
Sen, however, ended the entertainment with a pinpoint yorker, his fifth scalp sealing a performance defined by heart over polish. Kuldeep's figures flattered his occasional waywardness; it was his unyielding run-up and ability to hurry batsmen that reaped rewards on a pitch holding firm.
Kartikeya's guile (3 wickets implied in the collapse) added variety, underscoring MP's balanced attack.
At stumps, MP openers Harsh Gawli (not out 8) and Yash Dubey (not out 14) bedded in calmly, their composure a nod to the platform forged by the bowlers. J&K's strokeplay — ill-judged jabs and half-hearted application—contrasted sharply with MP's disciplined bowling, positioning the home side for a better hold.