Rajat Patidar ends RCB's 18-year drought, wins IPL trophy in first season as captain

Rajat Patidar ends RCB’s 18-year drought, wins IPL trophy in first season as captain

Jun 03, 2025 11:52 PM IST RCB beat Punjab Kings by six runs in the final at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. The long wait finally ended on Tuesday. For 18 years, the phrase “Ee Sala Cup Namde” transformed from a passionate cheer to a punchline for trolls. RCB had come close to the elusive IPL trophy three times before—most recently in 2016—but it was in 2025 that the drought ended. In his first season as captain, Rajat Patidar led the side to their maiden title, as RCB edged out Punjab Kings by six runs in a thrilling final at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s Krunal Pandya celebrates with captain Rajat Patidar after taking the catch of Punjab Kings’ Nehal Wadhera during IPL 2025 final(PTI) Few expected Patidar to be in the race to become the next captain after RCB had ended ties with Faf du Plessis last October, before the mega auction. The general expectation and the media speculation largely hinted at Virat Kohli’s return to captaincy since stepping down from the role in 2021. However, as Patidar surprisingly took over the role, many doubted his ability to lead the Indian star, not having led an IPL franchise before. However, the 32-year-old led RCB to their maiden IPL title, thus ending their long anticipation. RCB beat PBKS by 6 runs Punjab Kings bowlers did everything they could to restrict Royal Challengers Bengaluru to 190 for nine. But their batters failed to get the job done. RCB managed to get over the line despite not having the best time with the bat. Virat Kohli top-scored with 43 off 35 balls while skipper Rajat Patidar couldn’t build on a good start, managing 26 off 16 balls. For Punjab Kings, Yuzvendra Chahal was brilliant with figures of 1/37 in 4 overs, while Kyle Jamieson had the figures of 3 for 48. Krunal Pandya turned the pressure on PBKS, dismissing impact sub Prabhsimran Singh, even as they made 52/1 in the powerplay, before Bhuvneshwar shut the doors on Punjab when he got rid of Nehal Wadhera and Marcus Stoinis in a span of three deliveries in the 17th over and thereon, RCB’s triumph was only a formality. News / Cricket News / Rajat Patidar ends RCB’s 18-year drought, wins IPL trophy in first season as captain See Less

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RCB end 18 years of wait, romp to maiden IPL title with smashing win over Punjab Kings

RCB end 18 years of wait, romp to maiden IPL title with smashing win over Punjab Kings

Do away with all the memes. All the jokes. For the first time in 18 years of the Indian Premier League, RCB are CHAMPIONS. The Royal Challengers Bengaluru defended 190 against an in-form Punjab Kings to end the franchise’s long, agonising and painful wait for a maiden IPL win. Krunal Pandya’s splendid show of 2/17 from four overs knocked the stuffing out of PBKS’ batters, allowing the one-and-only Virat Kohli to realise his dream of what it feels like to have all premier trophies in his cabinet. Kohli was already a World Cup winner, a World T20 champion, and a Champions Trophy holder. He will now wake up on June 4, 2025, as an IPL champion. You can finally say it. RCB are IPL champions(Reuters) For RCB, legends have come and gone. Rahul Dravid, Anil Kumble, Daniel Vettori and even Kohli himself tried their best but couldn’t get RCB over the line. Rajat Patidar, 32, in his first year as captain, outshone them all, cementing his place in the RCB history books. At a venue where 200-run targets have been chaseable without breaking much sweat, RCB must get all the credit in the world for defending a total 10 runs short of. Given the start Prabhsimran Singh and Priyansh Arya provided Punjab, the target did not look threatening at all. But once Patidar rolled the dice on his spinners, the wheels began to come off. From 72/1 in the ninth over, PBKS slipped to 98/4 in less than four overs, with Krunal leading the charge. PBKS eventually finished at 184, just six runs shy, only possible due to Shashank Singh’s brilliant half-century, which unfortunately for PBKS, came a little too late. Also Read: RCB vs PBKS IPL 2025 Highlights Punjab Kings launched their chase with confidence, as openers Priyansh and Prabhsimran pounced on loose deliveries. Arya set the tone with a boundary off Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s first over, while Prabhsimran capped it with a towering six. Yash Dayal’s second over proved expensive, leaking runs with a fortunate boundary and a leg-bye four. Josh Hazlewood tightened things up in the third over, but the momentum remained with PBKS. The Aussie pacer struck in the fifth over, removing Arya, and Bhuvneshwar’s economical fourth over kept the run rate in check. By the end of the powerplay, Inglis injected aggression with a six in the sixth over, though RCB squandered a review. Also Read: RCB vs PBKS IPL 2025 final highlights RCB turned to spin to shift the tide, with Krunal delivering a miserly seventh over to stifle PBKS. Suyash Sharma was introduced, but Inglis and Prabhsimran broke free, each hammering a six. Krunal hit back though, dismissing Prabhsimran, and the pressure intensified when Romario Shepherd landed a massive blow, removing Shreyas Iyer. Inglis kept PBKS alive, punishing short balls with another six in Shepherd’s 12th over. However, the game tilted decisively in RCB’s favour when Krunal dismissed Inglis in the 12.1st over, caught by Liam Livingstone at long-on. With all eyes on Nehal Wadhera and Shashank Singh – PBKS’s last recognised batting pair, but despite a couple of lusty blows, much damage wasn’t inflicted. With the required run rate touching 16 an over, the 17th over, bowled by Bhuvneshwar, was going to be make or break for Punjab. And break it was, with Nehal and Marcus Stoinis perishing in three balls. RCB believed, as did their fans. Even the legendary AB de Villiers rushed out of the commentary box to stand near the boundary. Story of the first innings RCB’s batting lineup, led by the experienced Kohli, struggled to find momentum against a disciplined Punjab Kings attack. The innings began brightly with Phil Salt’s aggressive start, smashing a six and a four off Arshdeep Singh in the opening over to race to 13/0. However, Kyle Jamieson struck early for Punjab, dismissing Salt for 16 in the second over. Kohli and Mayank Agarwal steadied the ship, guiding RCB to 59/1 by the end of the powerplay. Agarwal played fluently, finding boundaries with ease, including an aerial cover drive off Vijaykumar Vyshak. However, Yuzvendra Chahal turned the tables by dismissing Agarwal. Kohli, adopting an anchor role, struggled to accelerate, managing only three boundaries at a strike rate of 123.08. RCB captain Rajat Patidar injected some momentum with a six off Chahal, but his aggressive intent was cut short by Jamieson’s slow yorker. Azmatullah Omarzai further dented RCB’s hopes by dismissing Kohli with a well-directed short ball, which Kohli top-edged. The middle order faltered as Liam Livingstone and Jitesh Sharma failed to capitalise on their starts. Jitesh briefly ignited hopes with two sixes off Jamieson, including a stunning scoop over the keeper, but his departure in the 18th over left RCB at 171/6. Romario Shepherd’s late cameo (four and six in the 19th over) kept RCB’s hopes of crossing 200 alive, but Arshdeep Singh’s sensational final over turned the game decisively. Arshdeep, despite an expensive night earlier, redeemed himself with a match-defining 20th over. He removed the dangerous Shepherd on the second ball, followed by Krunal Pandya two balls later, and capped it off by dismissing Bhuvneshwar Kumar on the final delivery, finishing with three wickets.

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