Meh, either way it was pretty insignificant in the context of the game. It was the KKR's bowlers inability to execute which cost them the game. Agarkar is just rubbish.
Agarkar is and has been rubbish for far too long so discussing him is pointless. For me the biggest issue with the KKR bowling is Ishant Sharma. Here is a bowler with pace, skill and can think and yet he is so busy playing the star that he has completely losing the plot. If instead of scowling and shouting at his fielders and at the batsmen at his own frustration at being taken to the cleaners, he were to just stop, get a hold on himself, think, go back to his mark and bowl the next ball he would do better. Unfortunately here is a player going the Sreesanth way unless he pulls up right now. The tragedy would be far greater in his case since he is far more talented than Sreesanth.
After a batsman has taken you to the cleaners and hit you for 20 or more, sometimes for two overs in succession, if you then just get his wicket (mostly because he throws it away trying to hoick you once again) you dont hurl abuses at him. You shut up and thank your stars that ordeal may, just may be over and go back and put on your thinking cap.
The worst thing you can do as a bowler is to work yourself into a rage over being hammered. I am afraid in Ishant's case this seems to be happening too often and while I hope I am wrong, I suspect it is because, like Sreesanth before him, Ishant has come to believe that he is too good to be treated with such scant respect by the batsmen. He has some hard knocks coming his way.
It was also disappointing to see that McCullum did not take his young bowler and council him gently. But then one does not know how good or bad the vibes are between the Indian stars and their Kiwi captain in this sad unit. With two prima donnas in the side and to bowl at the death where cool heads are the need of the moment, McCullum just did not have the right tools when the time came to stop the run flow of the MI in those last four overs.