The difference between a good side and a great one often lies in how quickly they learn. On a night when Royal Challengers Bengaluru arrived at the Wankhede Stadium, it was not just their batting firepower that stood out. It was their ability to adapt and respond. At the centre of that shift was Suyash Sharma, whose attacking approach with the ball reflected a side that had taken lessons on board.
Coming off their previous game where team balance hurt them, RCB made a clear tactical adjustment. This time, they ensured their bowling attack had the right mix by retaining Suyash in the XI and using the Impact Player option to bring in an additional pacer when required. It was a small but significant change that highlighted sharper decision-making.
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On a surface where 240 was posted, the margin for error with the ball was minimal. RCB understood that containment alone would not be enough. They needed wickets.
Attack over containment
Suyash’s mindset was clear from the outset. He was not looking to merely restrict runs. He was hunting breakthroughs.
“I was just thinking that I need to take wickets. Because in a long chase, you’re going to get hit anyway,” Suyash said after the game.
That clarity allowed him to commit fully to his plan. He trusted the conditions to offer turn and focused on attacking the stumps. Rather than being deterred by the risk of being hit, he leaned into it.
His figures of 2 for 47 in four overs may not immediately stand out, but they came at crucial moments. When Mumbai Indians were looking to build momentum, Suyash struck.
Ryan Rickelton’s dismissal halted the early push, while Tilak Varma’s wicket further dented MI’s progress. In a format where momentum swings quickly, those breakthroughs ensured that the chase never truly took off.
Suyash also highlighted how his approach was shaped by the match situation. With a big total on the board, he had the freedom to attack. “If we had fewer runs, maybe I would have focused on conceding fewer runs. But this time we had a lot of runs, so I thought I should go for wickets aggressively,” he explained.
RCB get the balance right
RCB’s overall performance showed how well their plans came together. Earlier in the evening, their batting unit had set the platform. Fifties from Phil Salt, Virat Kohli and Rajat Patidar powered them to a commanding 240 for four.
That total changed the equation for the bowlers. Instead of defending, they could attack. Suyash’s role became central in that strategy, especially through the middle overs where games are often decided.
Support came from Krunal Pandya, who kept things tight and mixed his lengths smartly, and the seamers who chipped in at key moments. Together, they ensured MI never found sustained momentum.
Even a late surge from Sherfane Rutherford could only reduce the margin. The damage had already been done in the middle overs.
For RCB, this was not just a win. It was proof of progress. A team that had stumbled due to tactical missteps showed that it could learn, adjust and execute.
At a venue long seen as MI’s stronghold, RCB did more than just win. They controlled the game with clarity and intent. And in Suyash Sharma, they found a bowler willing to embrace risk in pursuit of reward, a trait that made all the difference on the night.
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