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Owen's Record-Breaking 155 down MI New York Despite Pollard Heroics
Mitchell Owen's wild 68-ball 155, which included 13 sixes and 11 fours, was enough to propel Washington Freedom to their first MLC 2026 season victory, challenging Chris Gayle's 13-year-old T20 record score of 175*. Despite Kieron Pollard's unbeaten century, which surpassed another Gayle record by becoming the highest run-scorer in T20 cricket, Owen's extraordinary innings propelled Freedom to 245 for 5, which surpassed the defending champions MI New York. Owen ultimately fell 20 runs short of the all-time mark.
On a surface that was conducive to batting at Grand Prairie Stadium in Dallas, MI New York's decision to field first appeared reasonable. They could not have foreseen the devastation Owen would cause. Together with fellow Australian Steve Smith, who took just 27 balls, the Australian opener made 134 runs in 9.3 overs.
Owen then stitched together another brisk partnership worth 82 with Mark Chapman, who struck 23 off 12 deliveries, while continuing his assault on the bowlers. He needed 25 balls to score fifty, 16 more to score one hundred, and 19 more to reach 150. The smallest margin for error he allowed the bowlers was the defining feature of the innings; anything even slightly off line or length disappeared to the boundary.
Owen had surpassed the previous individual MLC record score of 151 against Washington Freedom last season, and he still had 20 balls left when he considered Gayle's long-standing world record. However, Corbin Bosch ended the remarkable innings with a superb return catch off his own bowling. With only 29 runs conceded from their final 29 deliveries, MI New York deserves credit for how they ended the innings. As a result, the goal remained 246 rather than a significantly steeper one.
However, the pursuit never really got going. Glenn Maxwell started the game for Washington Freedom, and the move paid off right away when he took out Monank Patel in the first over. After that, Maxwell ran out Quinton de Kock and then threw out captain Nicholas Pooran, leaving MI New York at 22 for 3. A fourth wicket just before the Powerplay ended effectively put an end to any genuine hopes of victory.
The defending champions deserve credit for ensuring that their net run rate did not suffer a significant decrease. With a typically strong innings that began with a 70-run partnership with Romario Shepherd, Pollard led the opposition. After Bosch made his way to No. 8 and hit an unbeaten 35 off just 14 balls, the match had long since become meaningless.
Pollard scored 87 in the final over and scored fifty off 32 balls. He reached 90 with three balls remaining before hitting boundaries with the subsequent two. He drilled Saurabh Netravalkar's full ball toward long-on and sprinted back for the second run as Bosch dived at the danger end to complete the run, needing six off the final delivery for a century. On the same day that he became the most successful run-scorer in the format, Pollard won his second T20 hundred with this effort.