Srh vs Rcb
Sunrisers Hyderabad beat Royal Challengers Bangalore at the Rajiv Gandhi Stadium in a match the bowlers decided well before the batsmen had figured out the surface. SRH 4, RCB 0. RCB's middle order had no answer to the conditions and the captaincy got cute when it should have stayed simple. Short version of how it played out.
What happened
SRH won the toss, chose to field, and the decision looked correct within the first powerplay. Overcast Hyderabad with assistance for the seamers. Bhuvneshwar Kumar bowled the kind of opening spell — full, swinging, both sides — that wins matches before they really start. T. Natarajan picked up the second-spell wickets. RCB ended on a below-par total.
Chasing, SRH didn't rush. Kane Williamson took the surface out of the equation by simply playing properly — leaving the moving ball, picking off the bowlers when they shortened. His 50 was the quiet match-winner. Bairstow at the top set the platform; Abdul Samad and Jason Holder finished it off without drama.
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Where RCB lost it
The decision to promote Devdutt Padikkal up the order against the moving ball. It exposed a top-quality middle-order player to conditions he wasn't set up for and the early wicket cost RCB momentum they never recovered.
The captaincy was the second issue. With SRH chasing, RCB needed wickets through the middle overs to give themselves a chance. The fields were defensive when they should have been aggressive, and the bowling changes were slow. By the time the proper attacking field came on, Williamson was set.
Powerplay scoring rate of 8.9 was the killer stat. Below par on that surface meant the whole innings was playing catch-up.
SRH's pattern
This is the SRH template when it works. Wickets in the first six overs. Williamson absorbing pressure in the middle. Holder or Samad to finish. They don't have the firepower of MI or CSK at the top of the order but they have the smartest game-state batsmen in the tournament when conditions favour the careful approach.
The bowling is the unit's actual strength. Bhuvneshwar is still the best new-ball Indian seamer outside Test cricket. Natarajan in the middle overs, Holder at the death. That's a complete attack.
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Key performances
Williamson 50 — match-winner without ever looking like one. Bhuvneshwar 2/15 — controlled the powerplay. Natarajan 2 wickets in the middle overs. Holder steady at the death.
For RCB, no one stood out. Faf Du Plessis got a start and threw it away on a poor shot. Maxwell never got going. Their bowlers tried but the total was always under par.
What it means for the table
SRH stay in the playoff conversation. RCB's net run rate took another hit. The pattern of underperforming against teams with strong bowling attacks continues, and Du Plessis is going to face questions about the team selection that didn't quite work.
For RCB to actually challenge, they need their middle order to fire on slow surfaces and the captaincy to commit to attacking fields earlier. Two problems they've had all season. Three games left to fix them.
SRH won this one because they were the better-prepared side. The bigger story for RCB is whether they can adjust before it's too late.
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