{"_id":"69f3752b063f8129390c1427","slug":"gt-vs-rcb-gujarat-titans-vs-royal-challengers-bengaluru-ipl-2026-virat-kohli-stats-and-records-2026-04-30","type":"feature-story","status":"publish","title_hn":"GT vs RCB: विराट ने एक ही ओवर में जड़े लगातार पांच चौके, इस लिस्ट…
#Virat #Kohli #crosses #IPL #runs #RCB #IPL #match">Virat Kohli crosses 9000 IPL runs during DC vs RCB IPL 2026 match
Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s Virat Kohli became the first batter to score 9000 runs in the Indian Premier League during an IPL 2026 match against Delhi Capitals on Monday.
Kohli, playing his 275th IPL game, achieved the feat in last ball of the sixth over with a single to long off against DC skipper Axar Patel.
The Indian batter has eight hundreds and six fifties in the tournament.
Only one other batter has scored more than 7000 IPL runs – Mumbai Indians opener Rohit Sharma.
Besides Royal Challengers oozing with confidence after five wins from seven matches, Capitals’ task is compounded by the likelihood of the defending champion enjoying a lion’s share of the support. Virat Kohli, the one constant in RCB’s ever-evolving set-up, may no longer be living here, but residents of the national capital continue to exhibit fierce loyalty to a superstar whose formative years can be traced to the by-lanes of west Delhi.
More importantly, the 37-year-old is showing no sign of slowing down in white-ball cricket. Despite prolonged breaks from competitive cricket following his Test retirement last year, his impact for the southern franchise hasn’t dimmed in the slightest — 328 runs in seven innings at a strike rate of 163.18 is proof.
Delhi Capitals’ disappointing outing against Punjab was summed up by Karun Nair’s two drop catches of Shreyas Iyer.
| Photo Credit:
RV MOORTHY
Delhi Capitals’ disappointing outing against Punjab was summed up by Karun Nair’s two drop catches of Shreyas Iyer.
| Photo Credit:
RV MOORTHY
The former skipper will be given company by Jacob Bethell at the top of the order. With Phil Salt yet to recover from injury, Bethell, who was drafted in for the last game, will get another chance to step up.
Other than that, RCB’s combination looks well-settled. The same cannot be said of Capitals, who are in desperate need of a win to shrug off Saturday’s erratic display.
Besides Royal Challengers oozing with confidence after five wins from seven matches, Capitals’ task is compounded by the likelihood of the defending champion enjoying a lion’s share of the support. Virat Kohli, the one constant in RCB’s ever-evolving set-up, may no longer be living here, but residents of the national capital continue to exhibit fierce loyalty to a superstar whose formative years can be traced to the by-lanes of west Delhi.
More importantly, the 37-year-old is showing no sign of slowing down in white-ball cricket. Despite prolonged breaks from competitive cricket following his Test retirement last year, his impact for the southern franchise hasn’t dimmed in the slightest — 328 runs in seven innings at a strike rate of 163.18 is proof.
Delhi Capitals’ disappointing outing against Punjab was summed up by Karun Nair’s two drop catches of Shreyas Iyer.
| Photo Credit:
RV MOORTHY
Delhi Capitals’ disappointing outing against Punjab was summed up by Karun Nair’s two drop catches of Shreyas Iyer.
| Photo Credit:
RV MOORTHY
The former skipper will be given company by Jacob Bethell at the top of the order. With Phil Salt yet to recover from injury, Bethell, who was drafted in for the last game, will get another chance to step up.
Other than that, RCB’s combination looks well-settled. The same cannot be said of Capitals, who are in desperate need of a win to shrug off Saturday’s erratic display.
Published on Apr 26, 2026
#IPL #Kohlis #backyard #RCB #holds #aces #host">IPL 2026: In Kohli’s backyard, RCB holds all the aces against host DC
Delhi Capitals’ (DC) performance against Punjab Kings on Saturday in the Indian Premier League (IPL) had the fluctuations of a volatile stock market.
So wildly did it oscillate from the sublime to the ridiculous, as an exemplary batting effort to amass 264 for two — DC’s highest total in IPL history — was followed by a horror show with the ball and in the field. While the bowling appeared rudderless on a pitch that played better than expected, the malaise of dropped catches spread like wildfire, allowing Shreyas Iyer and Prabhsimran Singh to make merry with half-centuries.
Dispiriting as that was, Axar Patel’s men have little time to contemplate, given that they run into another formidable opponent in Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) at the Arun Jaitley Stadium on Monday.
Besides Royal Challengers oozing with confidence after five wins from seven matches, Capitals’ task is compounded by the likelihood of the defending champion enjoying a lion’s share of the support. Virat Kohli, the one constant in RCB’s ever-evolving set-up, may no longer be living here, but residents of the national capital continue to exhibit fierce loyalty to a superstar whose formative years can be traced to the by-lanes of west Delhi.
More importantly, the 37-year-old is showing no sign of slowing down in white-ball cricket. Despite prolonged breaks from competitive cricket following his Test retirement last year, his impact for the southern franchise hasn’t dimmed in the slightest — 328 runs in seven innings at a strike rate of 163.18 is proof.
Delhi Capitals’ disappointing outing against Punjab was summed up by Karun Nair’s two drop catches of Shreyas Iyer.
| Photo Credit:
RV MOORTHY
Delhi Capitals’ disappointing outing against Punjab was summed up by Karun Nair’s two drop catches of Shreyas Iyer.
| Photo Credit:
RV MOORTHY
The former skipper will be given company by Jacob Bethell at the top of the order. With Phil Salt yet to recover from injury, Bethell, who was drafted in for the last game, will get another chance to step up.
Other than that, RCB’s combination looks well-settled. The same cannot be said of Capitals, who are in desperate need of a win to shrug off Saturday’s erratic display.
Published on Apr 26, 2026
#IPL #Kohlis #backyard #RCB #holds #aces #host
Delhi Capitals’ (DC) performance against Punjab Kings on Saturday in the Indian Premier League (IPL)…
“When you are commanding the situation, you make bowlers bowl where you want. He made the wicket look easy, but it wasn’t,” Dahiya noted, adding that the knock came against “world-class bowlers”.
“I think it’s amazing. If you look at his energy… his awareness, his energy and his willingness.
“That willingness to do well… his mindset sets him apart from a lot of other people.”
“He is still one of the best runners and keeps pushing youngsters for extra runs. That willingness to do well — that ‘ zid (relentless drive)’ — is what stands out,’ Dahiya said.
The GT assistant coach stressed that Kohli’s motivation is internal rather than driven by external expectations.
“He is not playing to prove a point to anyone. It’s about the man in the mirror — trying to be better than yesterday,” he explained.
On the match, Dahiya admitted GT may have fallen short by some more runs with the bat, having been restricted to 205 after looking good for more than 220 at one stage.
“We probably could have had a few more runs on the board,” he said, while maintaining that the team’s aggressive template remains unchanged.
“The approach has been driven by fearless cricket, especially from youngsters,” he added.
Dahiya also dismissed suggestions that experienced batters need to take cues from the younger generation.
“It’s not about young or experienced. Everyone has a role. Experienced players know how to adapt, and they are self-inspired,” he said.
“When you are commanding the situation, you make bowlers bowl where you want. He made the wicket look easy, but it wasn’t,” Dahiya noted, adding that the knock came against “world-class bowlers”.
“I think it’s amazing. If you look at his energy… his awareness, his energy and his willingness.
“That willingness to do well… his mindset sets him apart from a lot of other people.”
“He is still one of the best runners and keeps pushing youngsters for extra runs. That willingness to do well — that ‘ zid (relentless drive)’ — is what stands out,’ Dahiya said.
The GT assistant coach stressed that Kohli’s motivation is internal rather than driven by external expectations.
“He is not playing to prove a point to anyone. It’s about the man in the mirror — trying to be better than yesterday,” he explained.
On the match, Dahiya admitted GT may have fallen short by some more runs with the bat, having been restricted to 205 after looking good for more than 220 at one stage.
“We probably could have had a few more runs on the board,” he said, while maintaining that the team’s aggressive template remains unchanged.
“The approach has been driven by fearless cricket, especially from youngsters,” he added.
Dahiya also dismissed suggestions that experienced batters need to take cues from the younger generation.
“It’s not about young or experienced. Everyone has a role. Experienced players know how to adapt, and they are self-inspired,” he said.
Published on Apr 25, 2026
#RCB #IPL #Kohlis #mindset #sets #Gujarat #Titans #assistant #coach #Dahiya #fivewicket #loss">RCB vs GT, IPL 2026: Kohli’s mindset sets him apart, says Gujarat Titans assistant coach Dahiya after five-wicket loss
Gujarat Titans (GT) assistant coach Vijay Dahiya heaped rich praise on Virat Kohli, saying the former India captain’s relentless drive and hunger to improve continue to set him apart.
Kohli won the Man of the Match award for his match-defining 44-ball 81 in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s (RCB) five-wicket win against GT in the Indian Premier League fixture in Bengaluru on Friday.
Dahiya revealed that Kohli was disappointed despite his strong innings, reflecting the batter’s high standards.
“After the game, he was saying he could have converted it into a hundred. That tells you about his mindset,” Dahiya said at the post-match press conference.
Highlighting what makes Kohli special, Dahiya pointed to his energy, awareness and ability to control the game.
“When you are commanding the situation, you make bowlers bowl where you want. He made the wicket look easy, but it wasn’t,” Dahiya noted, adding that the knock came against “world-class bowlers”.
“I think it’s amazing. If you look at his energy… his awareness, his energy and his willingness.
“That willingness to do well… his mindset sets him apart from a lot of other people.”
“He is still one of the best runners and keeps pushing youngsters for extra runs. That willingness to do well — that ‘ zid (relentless drive)’ — is what stands out,’ Dahiya said.
The GT assistant coach stressed that Kohli’s motivation is internal rather than driven by external expectations.
“He is not playing to prove a point to anyone. It’s about the man in the mirror — trying to be better than yesterday,” he explained.
On the match, Dahiya admitted GT may have fallen short by some more runs with the bat, having been restricted to 205 after looking good for more than 220 at one stage.
“We probably could have had a few more runs on the board,” he said, while maintaining that the team’s aggressive template remains unchanged.
“The approach has been driven by fearless cricket, especially from youngsters,” he added.
Dahiya also dismissed suggestions that experienced batters need to take cues from the younger generation.
“It’s not about young or experienced. Everyone has a role. Experienced players know how to adapt, and they are self-inspired,” he said.
The venue is next scheduled to host one playoff and the summit clash in May.
“We were happy to play here, it’s a special place to play cricket. It’s been brilliant to play at home and win four games. Hopefully, we’ll be able to come back and play here again later in the season,” said Kohli in the post-match presentation.
Kohli was also effusive in his praise for Devdutt’s 27-ball 55, calling it the “difference” in the first half of the chase.
“To be honest, we had to assess the wicket early on because they (GT) have a quality bowling attack and chasing 200 in the Chinnaswamy, we were just one partnership away.
“This is the second time Dev (Padikkal) has come and done this. You never see him slogging the ball yet he’s playing so freely. His innings was the difference in the first half and then I was trying to stay in the game so he won’t feel the pressure,” said Kohli, who is now the Orange Cap holder with 328 runs from seven innings.
Put in to bat, Gujarat Titans had a strong 128-run opening stand in 12.4 overs, but its middle order failed to maintain momentum as RCB pulled things back, denying it an additional 10-20 runs.
“Even in our bowling innings, we did well to pull things back. We were looking at 230-235 at one stage,” said Kohli.
On the pitch, he added: “Best batting conditions we’ve had this season. So if we stayed in the game long enough it would get tougher and tougher for bowlers.
“Dev was going great guns and the idea was to keep the pressure on the bowlers. There was intent, clarity and feedback from the other and we didn’t have any doubts in the partnership and that’s what worked for us.”
We had our moments: Gill
GT skipper Shubman Gill rued the dropped chance of Kohli on zero by Washington Sundar off Mohammed Siraj.
“When a batsman gets dropped on nought, it’s always tough on the fielder but it’s important how you come back into the game,” said Gill.
“We had our moments but we were not consistently able to hit the length balls. And I think they batted beautifully in the middle overs.”
Gill also pointed out GT’s middle-overs slowdown as a key factor.
“Definitely, I think from 16th to 19th overs, we couldn’t get any boundaries and couldn’t get as many runs as we would have liked. Those were crucial overs for us.
“At the end of the powerplay, we were in a good position and it was about taking wickets in the middle overs and were not able to after the powerplay got over.”
The venue is next scheduled to host one playoff and the summit clash in May.
“We were happy to play here, it’s a special place to play cricket. It’s been brilliant to play at home and win four games. Hopefully, we’ll be able to come back and play here again later in the season,” said Kohli in the post-match presentation.
Kohli was also effusive in his praise for Devdutt’s 27-ball 55, calling it the “difference” in the first half of the chase.
“To be honest, we had to assess the wicket early on because they (GT) have a quality bowling attack and chasing 200 in the Chinnaswamy, we were just one partnership away.
“This is the second time Dev (Padikkal) has come and done this. You never see him slogging the ball yet he’s playing so freely. His innings was the difference in the first half and then I was trying to stay in the game so he won’t feel the pressure,” said Kohli, who is now the Orange Cap holder with 328 runs from seven innings.
Put in to bat, Gujarat Titans had a strong 128-run opening stand in 12.4 overs, but its middle order failed to maintain momentum as RCB pulled things back, denying it an additional 10-20 runs.
“Even in our bowling innings, we did well to pull things back. We were looking at 230-235 at one stage,” said Kohli.
On the pitch, he added: “Best batting conditions we’ve had this season. So if we stayed in the game long enough it would get tougher and tougher for bowlers.
“Dev was going great guns and the idea was to keep the pressure on the bowlers. There was intent, clarity and feedback from the other and we didn’t have any doubts in the partnership and that’s what worked for us.”
We had our moments: Gill
GT skipper Shubman Gill rued the dropped chance of Kohli on zero by Washington Sundar off Mohammed Siraj.
“When a batsman gets dropped on nought, it’s always tough on the fielder but it’s important how you come back into the game,” said Gill.
“We had our moments but we were not consistently able to hit the length balls. And I think they batted beautifully in the middle overs.”
Gill also pointed out GT’s middle-overs slowdown as a key factor.
“Definitely, I think from 16th to 19th overs, we couldn’t get any boundaries and couldn’t get as many runs as we would have liked. Those were crucial overs for us.
“At the end of the powerplay, we were in a good position and it was about taking wickets in the middle overs and were not able to after the powerplay got over.”
Published on Apr 25, 2026
#IPL #Virat #Kohli #hopes #return #special #Chinnaswamy #season #RCBs #win #Gujarat #Titans">IPL 2026: Virat Kohli hopes to return to ‘special’ Chinnaswamy later this season after RCB’s win over Gujarat Titans
Virat Kohli described the Chinnaswamy Stadium as a “special place to play cricket” as defending champion Royal Challengers Bengaluru ended its home campaign on a high after a controversy-ridden build-up to the season because of last year’s tragic stampede.
RCB on Friday rode on an explosive 115-run second-wicket stand between Kohli and Devdutt Padikkal to overhaul Gujarat Titans’ challenging 206-run target in 18.5 overs with five wickets in hand, finishing its home leg with four wins from five games.
RCB’s two remaining ‘home’ games will be played in Raipur due to prior arrangements.
“Firstly, we were quite happy we were able to play five games here and the fans get to see the team again,” said Kohli, who made a 44-ball 81 and was adjudged the player-of-the-match.
The Chinnaswamy was cleared to host seven IPL 2026 matches, including the final, after a successful safety review by government agencies days before the tournament.
The venue is next scheduled to host one playoff and the summit clash in May.
“We were happy to play here, it’s a special place to play cricket. It’s been brilliant to play at home and win four games. Hopefully, we’ll be able to come back and play here again later in the season,” said Kohli in the post-match presentation.
Kohli was also effusive in his praise for Devdutt’s 27-ball 55, calling it the “difference” in the first half of the chase.
“To be honest, we had to assess the wicket early on because they (GT) have a quality bowling attack and chasing 200 in the Chinnaswamy, we were just one partnership away.
“This is the second time Dev (Padikkal) has come and done this. You never see him slogging the ball yet he’s playing so freely. His innings was the difference in the first half and then I was trying to stay in the game so he won’t feel the pressure,” said Kohli, who is now the Orange Cap holder with 328 runs from seven innings.
Put in to bat, Gujarat Titans had a strong 128-run opening stand in 12.4 overs, but its middle order failed to maintain momentum as RCB pulled things back, denying it an additional 10-20 runs.
“Even in our bowling innings, we did well to pull things back. We were looking at 230-235 at one stage,” said Kohli.
On the pitch, he added: “Best batting conditions we’ve had this season. So if we stayed in the game long enough it would get tougher and tougher for bowlers.
“Dev was going great guns and the idea was to keep the pressure on the bowlers. There was intent, clarity and feedback from the other and we didn’t have any doubts in the partnership and that’s what worked for us.”
We had our moments: Gill
GT skipper Shubman Gill rued the dropped chance of Kohli on zero by Washington Sundar off Mohammed Siraj.
“When a batsman gets dropped on nought, it’s always tough on the fielder but it’s important how you come back into the game,” said Gill.
“We had our moments but we were not consistently able to hit the length balls. And I think they batted beautifully in the middle overs.”
Gill also pointed out GT’s middle-overs slowdown as a key factor.
“Definitely, I think from 16th to 19th overs, we couldn’t get any boundaries and couldn’t get as many runs as we would have liked. Those were crucial overs for us.
“At the end of the powerplay, we were in a good position and it was about taking wickets in the middle overs and were not able to after the powerplay got over.”
#RCB #IPL #Kohli #Padikkal #fifties #trump #Sudharsan #century #Royal #Challengers #Bengaluru #wins">RCB vs GT IPL 2026: Kohli, Padikkal fifties trump Sudharsan century as Royal Challengers Bengaluru wins again
A scintillating century by Sai Sudharsan was not enough as half centuries from Virat Kohli (81 off 44 balls) and Devdutt Padikkal (55 off 27 balls) helped Royal Challengers Bengaluru defeat Gujarat Titans by five wickets at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Friday night.
Batting first, GT posted 205 thanks to Sudharsan’s innings (100 of 58 balls), his third century overall in the IPL. GT looked well set to amass 230 at the halfway stage of the first innings.
But some tight bowling by the RCB bowlers in the back end of the innings, not conceding a single boundary in the last four, helped the home side pull things back.
The second innings would have panned out very differently had Washington Sundar held onto a simple catch when Kohli was batting at 0, but as it happened, the opening batter made the visitor pay for the costly drop.
Chasing totals is Kohli’s bread and butter and it was just not Kohli, but also Padikkal from the other end who managed the pace of the chase to perfection, unleashing the big shots at regular intervals to leave the middle order with very little to do.
GT staged a brief fightback in the back end of the innings by dismissing Rajat Patidar and Jitesh Sharma in quick succession, but Krunal Pandya and Tim David took RCB home.
#RCB #IPL #Virat #Kohli #batter #join #sixes #club">RCB vs GT, IPL 2026: Virat Kohli becomes third batter to join 300 sixes club
Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s Virat Kohli became just the third player to complete 300 sixes in IPL in his side’s match against Gujarat Titans at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Friday.
Kohli reached the landmark with a six over long-on in the eight over of the innings against Rashid Khan.
Chris Gayle and Rohit Sharma are the only other players who have hit more than 300 sixes in the IPL. Gayle leads the pack with 357 sixes, while Mumbai Indians’ Rohit has hit 321 sixes.
Kohli has reached this milestone in his 266th IPL innings.
CSK’s MS Dhoni and South African AB de Villiers round off the top five list, with 264 and 251 sixes respectively.
#IPL #GTs #topheavy #method #face #fullthrottle #RCB #test">IPL 2026: GT’s top-heavy method to face full-throttle RCB test
In a way, Gujarat Titans is a throwback to the Royal Challengers Bengaluru of yesteryear.
Back then, Virat Kohli, AB de Villiers and Chris Gayle used to do the bulk of the scoring and the rest of the batting line-up would be comparatively airy. GT of today is eerily similar, with the troika of Shubman Gill, B. Sai Sudharsan and Jos Buttler expected to do all the heavy-lifting.
On Friday at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium here, GT’s biggest test against an RCB outfit that operates at full throttle from ball one will be to prove that its methods – even if they seem anachronistic – are effective enough.
“I don’t think we’ll suddenly change,” said Vikram Solanki, GT’s director of cricket, on match-eve. “We’ll remain consistent in the way we go about our cricket altogether. We trust in a method and formula, and we trust the players that have delivered.”
Just that, in the most recent match, the players didn’t. GT lost by a crushing 99 runs to Mumbai Indians, a defeat Solanki attributed to “a number of errors”. It is imperative that the middle- and lower-orders contribute, especially Rahul Tewatia and M. Shahrukh Khan who have totalled 84 runs in 10 combined visits to the crease.
RCB too is coming in following a defeat – to Delhi Capitals at home by six wickets. But that reverse was only its second this season from six matches, and it boasts of such a well-set team that even a generational talent like England’s Jacob Bethell has had to warm the bench.
Friday will be the last time RCB will play in the Garden City this campaign, and there will be significant attention on a pitch which has not aided free-flowing strokeplay from the get-go. The city is also in the midst of a searing summer, but the RCB faithful will want nothing more than a rain of runs.
“But I believe where things have changed is that Virat Kohli now realises that he cannot bat at a strike-rate of 130. Things have moved on. He is batting at a strike-rate of 150 generally. But interestingly, down the order, people are going at 180-200 and that is why RCB is playing so well.
Fitness focus
Manjrekar also praised Kohli for his fitness, noting that it was one of the important reasons behind the 37-year-old’s continued impressive form.
“The amount of time he spends just wanting to be this very, very fit cricketer. So when you’re aging and if you’re not really supremely fit, T20 cricket is about hand-eye coordination and running hard between the wickets, and you just have to be young in body. If your eyes can keep pace with it, that’s fine.
“Virat Kohli doesn’t let his age come in the way too much. It does, in Test cricket you saw that. But his fitness is never going to actually make things even more difficult for him. And we’re seeing that in his T20 batting both last season, and this season as well.”
He further pointed out that this was in line with how Kohli had achieved success across his career.
“Virat has achieved greatness, reached exceptional heights. He wasn’t as gifted as Tendulkar with batting ability or you’ll see his technique let him down in Test cricket,” Manjrekar. “But he willed himself to those heights by sheer fitness, and wanting to be at his best every time he stepped onto the field, just like Tendulkar. And that is what sets him apart.”
“But I believe where things have changed is that Virat Kohli now realises that he cannot bat at a strike-rate of 130. Things have moved on. He is batting at a strike-rate of 150 generally. But interestingly, down the order, people are going at 180-200 and that is why RCB is playing so well.
Fitness focus
Manjrekar also praised Kohli for his fitness, noting that it was one of the important reasons behind the 37-year-old’s continued impressive form.
“The amount of time he spends just wanting to be this very, very fit cricketer. So when you’re aging and if you’re not really supremely fit, T20 cricket is about hand-eye coordination and running hard between the wickets, and you just have to be young in body. If your eyes can keep pace with it, that’s fine.
“Virat Kohli doesn’t let his age come in the way too much. It does, in Test cricket you saw that. But his fitness is never going to actually make things even more difficult for him. And we’re seeing that in his T20 batting both last season, and this season as well.”
He further pointed out that this was in line with how Kohli had achieved success across his career.
“Virat has achieved greatness, reached exceptional heights. He wasn’t as gifted as Tendulkar with batting ability or you’ll see his technique let him down in Test cricket,” Manjrekar. “But he willed himself to those heights by sheer fitness, and wanting to be at his best every time he stepped onto the field, just like Tendulkar. And that is what sets him apart.”
Published on Apr 23, 2026
#RCBs #success #Kohli #trusting #batting #lineup #Sanjay #Manjrekar">RCB’s success down to Kohli trusting batting line-up more: Sanjay Manjrekar
Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s has started its title defence strongly, winning four of its first six matches as it looks to become the first team to win back-to-back IPL titles.
Leading the way with the bat once again for Rajat Patidar’s men is Virat Kohli, who is the team’s leading run-scorer with 247 runs from six innings at an average of 49.40 and a strike-rate of 157.32.
However, former India international Sanjay Manjrekar believes that a large part of the RCB’s recent success can be attributed to the side shedding its dependence on Kohli.
“I believe that what has changed in the last two years, apart from Virat Kohli’s strike rate going up, is that he has stopped believing that he is the one batter who’s got to do it for RCB, and has taken a little bit of a backseat and delegated,” Manjrekar said on Sportstar’s Inside Edge podcast.
“Earlier, when AB and Virat were the two big batters, by accident or by design, they were consuming a lot of balls per RCB innings,” Manjrekar said. “If you see now with RCB, people like Devdutt Padikkal, Rajat Patidar, and Tim David are providing a lot of useful contributions from down the order because they are getting the opportunity to come in and spend time in the middle.”
“I’d like to believe that the reason RCB won the title and is looking really good this season is because Virat Kohli, who bats at the top of the order, is just not putting as huge a prize on his wicket and has started trusting the batters to come a little more.”
Manjrekar noted that Kohli’s improved strike-rate had dovetailed well with the pyrotechnics coming from the rest of the RCB batting line-up, saying, “Earlier, he was happy to go at a strike-rate of 120-130. Also, I think he was going into bat and thinking about a milestone, which not too many people think. But I can understand the pressure of a big brand wanting to get those 50s and showing that he’s contributing.
“But I believe where things have changed is that Virat Kohli now realises that he cannot bat at a strike-rate of 130. Things have moved on. He is batting at a strike-rate of 150 generally. But interestingly, down the order, people are going at 180-200 and that is why RCB is playing so well.
Fitness focus
Manjrekar also praised Kohli for his fitness, noting that it was one of the important reasons behind the 37-year-old’s continued impressive form.
“The amount of time he spends just wanting to be this very, very fit cricketer. So when you’re aging and if you’re not really supremely fit, T20 cricket is about hand-eye coordination and running hard between the wickets, and you just have to be young in body. If your eyes can keep pace with it, that’s fine.
“Virat Kohli doesn’t let his age come in the way too much. It does, in Test cricket you saw that. But his fitness is never going to actually make things even more difficult for him. And we’re seeing that in his T20 batting both last season, and this season as well.”
He further pointed out that this was in line with how Kohli had achieved success across his career.
“Virat has achieved greatness, reached exceptional heights. He wasn’t as gifted as Tendulkar with batting ability or you’ll see his technique let him down in Test cricket,” Manjrekar. “But he willed himself to those heights by sheer fitness, and wanting to be at his best every time he stepped onto the field, just like Tendulkar. And that is what sets him apart.”