Punjab Kings assistant coach Brad Haddin admitted his team were 20-30 runs short with the bat, and added that some batters could have been more proactive when they were out in the middle.
At the end of the Power-play, Punjab were cruising at 52/2. But Gujarat's bowlers, led by Mohit Sharma's 2-18, gave away only 42 runs in the middle overs and picked four wickets in the last five overs to keep Punjab to a below-par 153/8. Moreover, Punjab's batters played 56 dot balls collectively as they crashed to a six-wicket defeat at home.
"It was in our batting, we probably left 20-30 runs out there. In the end, that's probably the difference in the result. Last game, I thought Hyderabad bowled well. This time it was our fault with the bat not capitalising on a few guys that got in, be a little more proactive to find those 20-30 runs," said Haddin in the post-match press conference.