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#IPL #RCBs #sixhitting #machine #Tim #David #hits #roof">IPL 2026: RCB’s six-hitting machine Tim David hits the roof Tim David showed exactly why Royal Challengers Bengaluru retained his services for the 2026 season with a scintillating power-hitting display for the defending Indian Premier League (IPL) champion on Sunday.
The 30-year-old Australian clobbered eight sixes in his unbeaten 70 off 25 balls as Bengaluru scored a 43-run win over Chennai Super Kings to make it two wins from two.
In an innings of huge hits, David drew gasps with a monstrous 106m strike that landed on the roof of the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium.
“I’ve been getting in trouble during training with the boys,” Player-of-the-Match David said of the six.
“We have competitions to try and hit them on the roof, and we’re obviously on the side pitches. So, to get one during a match out of the middle, help it up on the roof, it was good fun.”
Bengaluru tops the early-season standings with a net run rate superior to that of Rajasthan Royals, Delhi Capitals and Punjab Kings, who also began with back-to-back wins.
Bengaluru’s Rajat Patidar thumped 48 not out off 19 balls and David, who plundered 30 runs from a Jamie Overton over that included four sixes, said the captain’s approach helped set the platform for his late burst.
“Rajat was absolutely smoking it and I was taking balls off him so to be able to get us to a score and obviously put a lot of pressure on the opposition,” he added.
Chasing 251 for victory, five-time champion Chennai Super Kings managed 207 before being bowled out with two balls left in its innings.
“If you look at the score, we were ahead of them up to about five overs to go,” CSK head coach Stephen Fleming said.
“And then they just went like a rocket. So, that’s really where the game was lost for us.”
It was a third straight defeat for Chennai Super Kings, which slipped to the bottom of the table.
Published on Apr 06, 2026
Tim David showed exactly why Royal Challengers Bengaluru retained his services for the 2026 season…
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#VIDEO #Hard #work #selfbelief #helped #elevate #game #Padikkal">VIDEO | Hard work and self-belief helped me elevate my game, says Padikkal
Royal Challengers Bengaluru batter Devdutt Padikkal said a lot of hard work over the last few seasons has helped elevate his game, while also crediting the franchise management for his growth as a batter.
Padikkal struck a stroke-filled 50 off 29 balls as the defending champion piled up a daunting 250 for 3 against the Chennai Super Kings.
“Simply put it is a lot of hard work and a lot of self-belief that’s helped me get there. It wasn’t easy initially to make that change because it was something that I had to really change from the foundation that I have in terms of the type of cricket I wanted to play growing up, that’s a change that I have made consciously,” he told the media after the game.
“RCB and the whole support staff have been really great and have been guiding me in the right way,” he added.
Published on Apr 06, 2026
Royal Challengers Bengaluru batter Devdutt Padikkal said a lot of hard work over the last few seasons has helped elevate his game, while also crediting the franchise management for his growth as a batter.
Padikkal struck a stroke-filled 50 off 29 balls as the defending champion piled up a daunting 250 for 3 against the Chennai Super Kings.
“Simply put it is a lot of hard work and a lot of self-belief that’s helped me get there. It wasn’t easy initially to make that change because it was something that I had to really change from the foundation that I have in terms of the type of cricket I wanted to play growing up, that’s a change that I have made consciously,” he told the media after the game.
“RCB and the whole support staff have been really great and have been guiding me in the right way,” he added.
Published on Apr 06, 2026
Royal Challengers Bengaluru batter Devdutt Padikkal said a lot of hard work over the last…
Sports news
#defeats #matches #CSK #captaincy #conundrum #ethos #prevail">14 defeats in 22 matches: Does CSK have a captaincy conundrum or will its ethos prevail?
Chennai Super Kings has rarely been a franchise that reacts in haste. Its identity has been built as much on continuity as on success, and, just as importantly, on the assurance of steady starts to a season.
Gaikwad’s tenure as captain is still in its early stages, yet the numbers are beginning to accumulate in a way that cannot be ignored. Fourteen defeats against eight wins is not, in itself, a definitive verdict, but it is enough to shift the conversation from patience to proof. The added weight of a third consecutive loss this season, against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Sunday, only sharpens that shift.
To reduce this moment to a simple question of leadership, however, would be misleading. Gaikwad has stepped into a role long defined by MS Dhoni, whose influence on Chennai’s tactical and emotional rhythms remains deeply embedded. What he inherits is not merely a team, but a system that, for over a decade, functioned with a rare degree of certainty.
RELATED | This loss is on me: CSK skipper Ruturaj Gaikwad after heavy loss to RCB
There is also a more immediate, less discussed constraint. Chennai’s most recent auction cycle has left it with a squad that, by its own standards, appears uneven. The bowling resources, in particular, lack the variety and control that once allowed captains to operate with foresight rather than improvisation. The batting, until recently, has leaned heavily on a narrow core. In that context, Gaikwad is not so much shaping games as responding to their drift.
There is, then, a temptation to read leadership through the arc of Gaikwad’s batting career. His beginnings as a player were modest to the point of concern, two ducks in the first three games that might have unsettled a less assured franchise. Chennai persisted, and the returns were emphatic. Whether leadership invites the same patience, however, is less straightforward. Batting is individual and recoverable. Leadership, by contrast, plays out in real time and carries collective consequences.
Early signs this season have not been especially reassuring. Chennai’s familiar issues have resurfaced, hesitant starts, bowling changes that appear reactive, and an absence of the anticipatory sharpness that was once second nature under Dhoni. Yet, it is equally worth asking how much of that is within the captain’s control. When resources are limited, even sound decisions can appear inadequate.
It is in this context that alternatives acquire relevance. Sanju Samson offers a contrasting profile, a captain with prior experience and a clearer tactical imprint. The argument in his favour is not merely about results, but about readiness. With Dhoni nearing the end of his playing career, Chennai must soon plan for life without its long-time on-field axis. Managing that transition proactively, rather than reactively, has its own logic.
WATCH: Fleming blames poor execution as CSK slumps to third successive defeat
Yet, to move now would be to risk misdiagnosing the problem. Chennai has, over the years, resisted the impulse to chase immediate fixes, choosing instead to invest in continuity even at the cost of short-term setbacks. If the current dip is as much about squad construction as it is about captaincy, then changing the latter without addressing the former may offer only the illusion of progress.
The choice, then, is less about a comparison of individuals and more about institutional clarity. If leadership is something Chennai believes can be shaped over time, Gaikwad remains a project worth persisting with, particularly given the constraints he is operating under. If, however, this juncture is viewed as too significant to be entrusted to a work in progress, recalibration becomes difficult to avoid.
For now, the evidence is no longer easy to dismiss. But nor is it complete. And in that tension lies Chennai’s dilemma: whether to trust its method once more, or to accept that even the most stable systems must, at times, evolve.
Published on Apr 06, 2026
Chennai Super Kings has rarely been a franchise that reacts in haste. Its identity has been built as much on continuity as on success, and, just as importantly, on the assurance of steady starts to a season.
Gaikwad’s tenure as captain is still in its early stages, yet the numbers are beginning to accumulate in a way that cannot be ignored. Fourteen defeats against eight wins is not, in itself, a definitive verdict, but it is enough to shift the conversation from patience to proof. The added weight of a third consecutive loss this season, against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Sunday, only sharpens that shift.
To reduce this moment to a simple question of leadership, however, would be misleading. Gaikwad has stepped into a role long defined by MS Dhoni, whose influence on Chennai’s tactical and emotional rhythms remains deeply embedded. What he inherits is not merely a team, but a system that, for over a decade, functioned with a rare degree of certainty.
RELATED | This loss is on me: CSK skipper Ruturaj Gaikwad after heavy loss to RCB
There is also a more immediate, less discussed constraint. Chennai’s most recent auction cycle has left it with a squad that, by its own standards, appears uneven. The bowling resources, in particular, lack the variety and control that once allowed captains to operate with foresight rather than improvisation. The batting, until recently, has leaned heavily on a narrow core. In that context, Gaikwad is not so much shaping games as responding to their drift.
There is, then, a temptation to read leadership through the arc of Gaikwad’s batting career. His beginnings as a player were modest to the point of concern, two ducks in the first three games that might have unsettled a less assured franchise. Chennai persisted, and the returns were emphatic. Whether leadership invites the same patience, however, is less straightforward. Batting is individual and recoverable. Leadership, by contrast, plays out in real time and carries collective consequences.
Early signs this season have not been especially reassuring. Chennai’s familiar issues have resurfaced, hesitant starts, bowling changes that appear reactive, and an absence of the anticipatory sharpness that was once second nature under Dhoni. Yet, it is equally worth asking how much of that is within the captain’s control. When resources are limited, even sound decisions can appear inadequate.
It is in this context that alternatives acquire relevance. Sanju Samson offers a contrasting profile, a captain with prior experience and a clearer tactical imprint. The argument in his favour is not merely about results, but about readiness. With Dhoni nearing the end of his playing career, Chennai must soon plan for life without its long-time on-field axis. Managing that transition proactively, rather than reactively, has its own logic.
WATCH: Fleming blames poor execution as CSK slumps to third successive defeat
Yet, to move now would be to risk misdiagnosing the problem. Chennai has, over the years, resisted the impulse to chase immediate fixes, choosing instead to invest in continuity even at the cost of short-term setbacks. If the current dip is as much about squad construction as it is about captaincy, then changing the latter without addressing the former may offer only the illusion of progress.
The choice, then, is less about a comparison of individuals and more about institutional clarity. If leadership is something Chennai believes can be shaped over time, Gaikwad remains a project worth persisting with, particularly given the constraints he is operating under. If, however, this juncture is viewed as too significant to be entrusted to a work in progress, recalibration becomes difficult to avoid.
For now, the evidence is no longer easy to dismiss. But nor is it complete. And in that tension lies Chennai’s dilemma: whether to trust its method once more, or to accept that even the most stable systems must, at times, evolve.
Published on Apr 06, 2026
Chennai Super Kings has rarely been a franchise that reacts in haste. Its identity has…