🏏IPL 2024: Eliminator - RR vs RCB at Ahmedabad on 22/05/2024 @ 7:30PM IST🏏
[Logo Credit: Wildestdreams]
Form vs funk in RCB vs RR winner-takes-all rumble
After completely opposite runs to the playoffs, the momentum is very much on RCB's side as they take on an out-of-sorts Royals
No second chances
On April 21, Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) lost a 200-plus chase to Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) by one run, their seventh defeat in eight games, leaving them last in the league. As a familiar feeling of despondency shrouded their season, ESPNcricinfo outlined how they still had a chance, improbable though it was.
Since then, RCB have had a resurrection, the kind of turnaround that has been prime material for inspirational screenplays about sports teams coming back from the abyss. RCB didn't just win six in a row; they won by massive margins of 35 runs, 24 balls to spare, 38 balls to spare, 60 runs, 47 runs, and by 27 runs to improve their net run-rate and rise above three other teams on the same points as them, to make a dramatic last-minute dash into the playoffs.
A couple of days after RCB had begun their revival, Rajasthan Royals (RR) cruised to their eighth win in nine games. They had owned No. 1 for weeks and were favourites to finish there. There was absolutely no sign of what was to come.
The fall began insidiously, a one-run defeat in a 200-plus chase, a 20-run defeat in another 200-plus chase, both results so easily attributed to the vagaries of T20 cricket. Even when their batters were muzzled on a slow pitch in Chennai, their captain Sanju Samson didn't think they were playing bad cricket. But when it happened again in Guwahati, there was no denying their "failures". Despite losing four in a row, though, and having their final league game washed out, RR would have still finished No. 2 had Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) not won their last game. That's how strong a safety net they had built with all those early wins. It wasn't strong enough, however, to give them a second chance of making the final.
The value of confidence and momentum in sport is impossible to measure. RCB and RR's unexpected rise and fall are examples of how unpredictable T20 cricket can be. But in addition to intangibles like confidence and momentum, there's also experience. RR go into the Eliminator with no experience of playing a high-pressure, knockout game this season. RCB, on the other hand, have qualified for the Eliminator having played, and won, six eliminators already.
[Tag Credit: Sutapasima]
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