Patidar Dropped on 14. Then Dropped on 20. Then Scored 79 off 23.
254/5. 88/8. 92 Runs. RCB Just Walked Into Their Second Straight Final.
Two dropped catches. Two reprieves. And then an avalanche. Rajat Patidar was on 14 when Rashid Khan put him down. He was on 20 when Kagiso Rabada spilled the simplest of return catches. What followed was one of the most brutal innings in IPL playoff history — an unbeaten 93 off 33 deliveries, with nine sixes and five fours, that powered Royal Challengers Bengaluru to 254 for 5, the highest total ever recorded in an IPL playoff match. Gujarat Titans’ chase lasted 19.3 overs. They were 88 for 8 at one stage, then 162 all out. RCB are through to their second consecutive final. They await the winner of SRH vs RR and the loser of this match — GT, who now face a knockout in Qualifier 2.
Rajat Patidar raises his bat after a breathtaking 93* off 33 balls — the innings that powered RCB to the highest total in IPL playoff history and a second consecutive final. (Photo: Sportzpics / BCCI / IPL)
RCB Innings — 254/5: Two Drops, One Patidar, and a Record That Will Stand for Years
Shubman Gill won the toss and chose to bowl — a decision that made sense on a Dharamsala surface where both night games this season had been won by the chasing side. By the end of the 20th over, that decision had been eviscerated. Royal Challengers Bengaluru posted 254 for 5, the highest total in IPL playoff history, surpassing Gujarat Titans’ own 233 for 3 against Mumbai Indians in the 2023 Qualifier 2. The innings was built on two pillars: a powerplay of controlled aggression, and an explosion of unfiltered violence in the final six overs.
Venkatesh Iyer, opening in place of the still‑unfit Phil Salt, gave RCB a fiery start — 14 runs came off Mohammed Siraj’s opening over, including three boundaries. Kagiso Rabada struck back immediately, dismissing Venkatesh for 19 off the first ball of the second over. That brought Devdutt Padikkal to the crease. And Padikkal counter‑attacked without hesitation — three consecutive fours off Rabada in the fourth over, an 18‑run onslaught that shifted the momentum irrevocably. Virat Kohli, at the other end, was the anchor and the accelerator in equal measure: 43 off 25 balls, four fours, two sixes, his first IPL knockout fifty‑plus score in over a decade. RCB finished the powerplay at 76 for 1 — their highest powerplay score in any IPL playoff match.
Then Jason Holder produced two wickets in four balls — Kohli caught behind for 43, then Padikkal for 30 — to reduce RCB to 94 for 3. At that moment, the match was in the balance. Rajat Patidar had walked in at No. 4. He was on 14 when Rashid Khan dropped him at deep midwicket. He was on 20 when Kagiso Rabada missed a return catch — the simplest of chances, a dolly, that should have ended the innings. “Those two drops changed the entire complexion of the match,” wrote Hindustan Times. Patidar made them pay with compound interest.
What followed over the next 33 deliveries was a masterclass in brutal, intelligent T20 batting. Patidar and Krunal Pandya added 95 runs for the fourth wicket in just 48 balls. Krunal’s 43 off 32 was the perfect foil — rotating strike, punishing the occasional loose delivery. Patidar was the destroyer. He hit Kulwant Khejroliya for 28 runs in a single over — the 15th of the innings — that included two no‑balls, and completely broke GT’s bowling structure. Gill had Rashid Khan with two overs remaining, and yet chose to bowl Kulwant — a decision that ESPNcricinfo called “the turning point.” Patidar reached his fifty in 20 balls. He scored his next 43 runs in 13 balls. His unbeaten 93 came at a strike rate of 281.82. Nine sixes. Five fours. Every GT bowler went for runs. RCB plundered 114 runs in the final six overs — the highest death‑overs score in IPL playoff history.
| Batter | Dismissal | R | B | 4s | 6s | SR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rajat Patidar (c) ★ (not out) | — | 93 | 33 | 5 | 9 | 281.82 |
| Virat Kohli ★ | c †Buttler b Holder | 43 | 25 | 4 | 2 | 172.00 |
| Krunal Pandya ★ | c sub (Tewatia) b Rabada | 43 | 32 | 5 | 1 | 134.38 |
| Devdutt Padikkal | c †Buttler b Holder | 30 | 16 | 5 | 1 | 187.50 |
| Venkatesh Iyer | c Sindhu b Rabada | 19 | 8 | 3 | 1 | 237.50 |
| Jitesh Sharma (wk) | c Rashid b Siraj | 15 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 300.00 |
| Tim David (not out) | — | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 200.00 |
Extras: 5 (lb 1, w 3, nb 1). FOW: 21/1 (Venkatesh, 1.6), 93/2 (Kohli, 8.2), 94/3 (Padikkal, 8.4), 189/4 (Krunal, 16.4), 232/5 (Jitesh, 18.5). Powerplay: 76/1. Source: ESPNcricinfo, Cricbuzz, India Today.
| Bowler | O | R | W |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jason Holder ★ | 4 | 39 | 2 |
| Kagiso Rabada ★ | 4 | 54 | 2 |
| Mohammed Siraj | 4 | 46 | 1 |
| Kulwant Khejroliya | 3 | 51 | 0 |
| Rashid Khan | 3 | 34 | 0 |
| Prasidh Krishna | 2 | 28 | 0 |
🔴 The Drops That Defined the Match
Drop 1: Rashid Khan spilled Patidar on 14 at deep midwicket.
Drop 2: Kagiso Rabada missed a simple return catch with Patidar on 20.
Patidar was 14 off 10 at the time of the first drop. From that point, he scored 79 runs in his next 23 deliveries — a strike rate of 343.48. “We didn’t deserve to win,” Gill said. “We dropped too many catches in the second half.”
GT Chase — 162 All Out in 19.3 Overs: 88/8, Sudharsan’s Bizarre Hit-Wicket, and Tewatia’s Lone Resistance
Chasing 255 — the highest target ever set in an IPL playoff match — Gujarat Titans needed a start of historic proportions. What they produced was the opposite. Shubman Gill fell for a scratchy 2 off 7 balls in the second over, top‑edging Jacob Duffy to short third, where Jitesh Sharma completed a tumbling catch. Then, in the third over, came the moment that will define this match in visual memory for years. Sai Sudharsan — the Orange Cap leader, GT’s most consistent batter all season — played a classic cut shot off Duffy that raced to the third‑man boundary. But his bat slipped from his hands on the follow‑through. It cartwheeled behind him, struck the stumps, and dislodged the bails. Sudharsan was out hit‑wicket for 14. He became only the second player in IPL history to be dismissed hit‑wicket in a knockout match (after Kusal Mendis in 2025). NDTV Sports described it as a “brilliant shot turning into disaster.” GT were 17 for 1 at that point, but the psychological damage was far greater than the scoreboard suggested.
Jos Buttler briefly counter‑attacked with 29 off 11 balls — four fours, one six — taking the fight to RCB’s bowlers. But Josh Hazlewood produced a beauty to clean bowl him, and the collapse accelerated. Washington Sundar (11), Nishant Sindhu (6), and Jason Holder (4) all fell cheaply. RCB’s bowlers — Jacob Duffy (3/39), Krunal Pandya (2/16), Rasikh Salam (2/24), Bhuvneshwar Kumar (1/21), and Josh Hazlewood (1/22) — shared the wickets. Every member of the five‑man attack took at least one scalp. GT were reduced to 88 for 8 after 11.2 overs — a scoreline that evoked memories of RCB’s own 49 all out from years past.
Rahul Tewatia produced a defiant 68 off 43 balls — a knock of immense pride, with seven fours and three sixes — that dragged GT past 150 and reduced the margin of defeat from catastrophic to merely humiliating. He was eventually dismissed by a superb running catch from Rajat Patidar at cover — fittingly, the captain who had broken GT with the bat now finished them with his hands. GT were bowled out for 162 in 19.3 overs. The 92‑run margin was the second‑largest in IPL playoff history.
| Batter | Dismissal | R | B | 4s | 6s | SR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rahul Tewatia ★ | c Rajat Patidar b Bhuvneshwar | 68 | 43 | 7 | 3 | 158.14 |
| Jos Buttler ★ | b Hazlewood | 29 | 11 | 4 | 1 | 263.64 |
| Sai Sudharsan | hit wicket b Duffy | 14 | 9 | 2 | 0 | 155.56 |
| Washington Sundar | c sub (Cox) b Duffy | 11 | 10 | 2 | 0 | 110.00 |
| Shubman Gill (c) | c †Jitesh b Duffy | 2 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 28.57 |
| Nishant Sindhu | c Kohli b Krunal | 6 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 66.67 |
| Rashid Khan | c Venkatesh b Rasikh | 8 | 7 | 1 | 0 | 114.29 |
| Jason Holder | b Krunal | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 200.00 |
| Kulwant Khejroliya | b Rasikh | 3 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 50.00 |
| Prasidh Krishna | not out | 4 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 66.67 |
Extras: 13 (lb 1, w 8, nb 4). FOW: 7/1 (Gill, 1.4), 17/2 (Sudharsan, 2.5), 54/3 (Buttler, 5.5), 70/4 (Sundar, 8.1), 75/5 (Sindhu, 8.6), 87/6 (Rashid, 10.3), 88/7 (Holder, 11.1), 88/8 (Khejroliya, 11.2), 144/9 (Tewatia, 17.5). Powerplay: 59/3. Target: 255. Source: ESPNcricinfo, Hindustan Times, ABP Live.
| Bowler | O | R | W |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jacob Duffy ★ | 4 | 39 | 3 |
| Krunal Pandya ★ | 4 | 16 | 2 |
| Rasikh Salam Dar ★ | 4 | 24 | 2 |
| Josh Hazlewood | 3 | 22 | 1 |
| Bhuvneshwar Kumar | 3.3 | 21 | 1 |
| Venkatesh Iyer | 1 | 22 | 0 |
🔵 GT’s Powerplay Collapse — 59/3
GT needed a fearless start. Instead, Gill fell cheaply for 2. Sudharsan was out hit‑wicket for 14 — a dismissal that occurs in roughly 0.01% of all T20 innings. Buttler briefly counter‑attacked before Hazlewood bowled him. By the end of the powerplay, GT had lost three wickets, the required rate had climbed above 14, and the contest was already slipping away.
Records & Milestones — A Night That Rewrote the IPL Playoff History Books
◆ Qualifier 1 — Statistical Landmarks
- 254/5 — Highest total in IPL playoff history. Surpassed GT’s 233/3 vs MI (Qualifier 2, 2023). RCB’s own previous playoff best was 207/4 vs CSK (Qualifier 1, 2011).
- Rajat Patidar — 93* off 33 balls at SR 281.82. The highest individual score by a captain in an IPL Qualifier. Nine sixes — the most by any batter in a single IPL playoff innings.
- 114 runs in the last 6 overs. The highest death‑overs score in any IPL playoff match.
- 76/1 — RCB’s highest powerplay score in any playoff match. Second‑highest conceded by GT this season.
- Sai Sudharsan — hit wicket. Only the second hit‑wicket dismissal in IPL playoff history, after Kusal Mendis (2025).
- GT’s 88/8 after 11.2 overs. Their worst batting collapse in any IPL match this season.
- 92‑run win — RCB’s second‑largest victory margin in IPL playoffs.
- RCB become the first team to reach back‑to‑back IPL finals since CSK (2018–2019).
Player of the Match — Rajat Patidar
Rajat Patidar was the obvious choice. His unbeaten 93 off 33 balls — at a strike rate of 281.82 — was the highest individual score by any captain in an IPL Qualifier, and the most sixes (9) hit in a single IPL playoff innings. After the match, Patidar said: “I was just trying to play my game and take the game deep. Krunal supported me brilliantly. He made my job easier by playing risk‑free shots at the other end. I’ve got a strong belief in my skills and I just wanted to back myself all the time.”
What They Said — The Post‑Match Verdicts
Key Moments That Defined the Match
1. Rabada Drops Patidar on 20 (RCB Innings, 11th over): Kagiso Rabada — the Purple Cap leader — missed the simplest of return catches offered by Patidar, who was on 20 at the time. It was the second life for the RCB captain. GT would regret it for the rest of the night.
2. The Kulwant Over — 28 Runs in the 15th (RCB 168/3 → 196/4): Shubman Gill turned to Kulwant Khejroliya instead of Rashid Khan, who had two overs remaining. The over produced 28 runs, including two no‑balls. It was the definitive shift — the moment the match swung irrevocably.
3. Patidar’s Six Off Rabada — The “Cover Drive Six” (RCB 196/4, 16th over): Patidar launched a short‑of‑a‑length delivery from Rabada over deep extra cover for a flat six — a shot so audacious that Virat Kohli, watching from the dugout, was captured on camera with his mouth wide open in disbelief.
4. Sudharsan’s Hit‑Wicket (GT 17/2, 2.5 ov): Playing a beautiful cut shot, Sudharsan’s bat slipped and cartwheeled into the stumps. The Orange Cap leader was gone for 14 in the most bizarre way possible — only the second hit‑wicket dismissal in IPL playoff history.
5. GT 88/8 After 11.2 Overs (GT Chase): RCB’s five‑man bowling attack shared eight wickets in the first 11.2 overs. The chase was effectively over. Only Tewatia’s 68 delayed the inevitable.
Playing XIs & Impact Sub Notes
Venkatesh Iyer, Virat Kohli, Devdutt Padikkal, Rajat Patidar (c), Jitesh Sharma (wk), Tim David, Krunal Pandya, Jacob Duffy, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Josh Hazlewood, Rasikh Salam Dar.
Impact Player: Romario Shepherd (unused). Key Decision: Phil Salt not selected despite being fit. Jacob Duffy replaced Romario Shepherd in the bat‑first XI. RCB through to their second consecutive IPL final.
Shubman Gill (c), Sai Sudharsan, Jos Buttler (wk), Washington Sundar, Jason Holder, Nishant Sindhu, Rahul Tewatia, Rashid Khan, Kulwant Khejroliya, Kagiso Rabada, Mohammed Siraj, Prasidh Krishna.
Impact Player: Rahul Tewatia (replaced Prasidh Krishna for the chase). Key Change: Kulwant Khejroliya in for Arshad Khan. GT now face the winner of the Eliminator in Qualifier 2 on May 29.
The Road Ahead — Updated Playoff Schedule
| Match | Date | Teams | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eliminator | May 27 | SRH (3rd) vs RR (4th) | New Chandigarh |
| Qualifier 2 | May 29 | GT (Q1 loser) vs Eliminator winner | New Chandigarh |
| Final 🏆 | May 31 | RCB (Q1 winner) vs Qualifier 2 winner | Ahmedabad |
🔴 RCB’s Path to the Title
RCB are now one win away from becoming the first team since CSK (2010–2011) to successfully defend an IPL title. They have three full days of rest before the final on May 31. They await the winner of the Eliminator (SRH vs RR) and Qualifier 2 (GT vs Eliminator winner).