Royal Challengers Bangalore 158 for 2 (Padikkal 63, Kohli 72*, Archer 1-18) beat Rajasthan Royals 154 for 6 (Lomror 47, Tewatia 24*, Chahal 3-24) by 8 wickets
Not since IPL 2013 have the Royal Challengers Bangalore won three out of their first four matches, but Virat Kohli's side are now at the top of the IPL 2020 points table after an eight-wicket win against Rajasthan Royals. It's a pleasant spot to be in after their travails of seasons past, even though the position is only temporary for now, with the winner of Saturday's second game set to go past them.
The win was built on the back of an excellent bowling performance. Yuzvendra Chahal, perhaps as important a member for the Royal Challengers as Kohli and AB de Villiers, was at the heart of the bowling effort with 3 for 24 in his quota, while Devdutt Padikkal added to his growing reputation with a fluid half-century in the chase.
Equally important for Royal Challengers, the below-par total of 154 for 6 that Royals had put up allowed Kohli to ease into his own innings. The cobwebs dusted from his batting, Kohli was striking the ball as well as ever by the time the chase was done. Padikkal's 63 off 45 was the cornerstone, but Kohli also cracked 72* off 53, his first significant score this season. His last 43 runs came off 23 balls.
Royal Challengers were in the ascendancy from early in the game, when the bowlers took out all three of the Royals gun batsmen inside the Powerplay. Steven Smith played on to Isuru Udana, too early into the shot against one of the seamer's myriad slower balls. Jos Buttler jammed his bat into a punch-drive that took the edge to first slip off Navdeep Saini's first ball, and Sanju Samson chipped one back for Chahal to complete a diving caught and bowled. At 31 for 3 in 4.1 overs, Royals were considerably behind, but given the identities of the batsmen dismissed, they were in a deeper hole than most other teams might have been at the same score.
ESPNcricinfo's Smart Stats showed a drastic drop in the expected total, from 170 to 131, while their win probability nosedived from 49.45% to 16.2%. It was a reflection of how much the Royals depend on their top three in the current line-up.
Royals stumble at the start
Smith won the toss in the first day-game of the season, and batting first seemed the right decision given the sapping heat. However, Royals couldn't make the most of that advantage with their top three gone within ten balls of each other. Buttler looked good during his brief stay, but Smith and Samson didn't last long enough for even a brief sparkle.
The Royals sent in Robin Uthappa at No.4, but if the move was intended to give some stability, it didn't quite have the desired effect. Far from his fluent best, Uthappa couldn't get going, and ended with his third score of less than a run a ball in four matches so far this season.
More to follow