
Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad — Thursday, 30 April, 7:30 PM IST
There is something fitting about Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s title defence routing through Ahmedabad in late April. The world’s largest cricket stadium will be at, or close to, its 1.3-lakh capacity. The pitch will have been baked all day under temperatures pushing 40°C. And the team that lifted the trophy in 2025 walks in carrying the weight of being a side everyone has now figured out how to scout.
Match 42 of IPL 2026 is not a final, but it has the look of one. Both sides are in the top half of the table. Both have already played each other once this season — RCB won that one in Bengaluru by five wickets, chasing down 206. The rematch comes at the venue that, more than any other in India, rewards bowlers who can hit the deck hard and punishes batters who try to muscle the ball down the ground without committing fully.
Where Both Teams Stand
|
Team |
Played | Won | Lost | Points | Position |
Last 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Royal Challengers Bengaluru |
8 | 6 | 2 | 12 | 2nd |
W-W-L-W-W |
|
Gujarat Titans |
8 | 5 | 3 | 10 | 4th-5th |
L-L-W-L-W |
Standings reflect results through Match 39 (DC vs RCB, 27 April). Punjab Kings remain the only unbeaten side; RCB sit second after a nine-wicket demolition of Delhi in Delhi.
RCB’s form line is the more impressive one, but the more interesting one belongs to GT. The Titans were beaten by 99 runs by Mumbai Indians on 20 April — bowled out for 100 in 15.5 overs — then bounced back to chase down CSK’s 158 with 20 balls to spare on 26 April. They are a team capable of either extreme on a given night, and Ahmedabad has historically been their fortress.
The Pitch: What Ahmedabad Actually Does
The Narendra Modi Stadium is one of the most misunderstood venues in the IPL. Casual viewers see the dimensions — 180 metres across — and assume it is a six-hitter’s paradise. Players who have batted there will tell you something different.
The square boundaries are short. The straight ones are not. The pitch in the centre, especially after midday heat in April, tends to grip more than batters expect, and the ball does not consistently come on. Spinners who land it on a length get rewarded. Pacers who try to bang it in halfway down often see the ball sit up and get pulled — but pacers who hit a fuller, swinging length into the pads are devastatingly effective under lights, when the dew has not yet arrived.
The first-innings totals at this ground in IPL 2026 have averaged in the 170s, not the 200s the dimensions might suggest. Chasing has been marginally easier than batting first, but only marginally — and only once the dew arrives, typically after the 12th over of the second innings.
RCB: A Title Defence That’s Aging Well
The defending champions have done what most defending champions fail to do: they have evolved. The unit that won in 2025 leaned heavily on a top three of Kohli–Salt–Patidar, with the bowling attack carrying the back end. The 2026 version is more balanced.
Virat Kohli’s numbers this season are the headline. Against Delhi on 27 April, he became the first batter in IPL history to cross 9,000 runs. His 81 off 44 balls in the first GT–RCB fixture this season was a study in how a 38-year-old anchored without slowing down — he hit boundaries when the ball was there, ran the gaps when it wasn’t, and never gave the bowlers a settled over. The “Kohli vs his old self” framing the broadcasters love is, frankly, a bit overdone. The version of Kohli playing in 2026 is doing things — strike rates in the 160s as a top-order anchor — that he would not have done at 28.
Around him, Devdutt Padikkal has emerged as the season’s quiet revelation. His 55 off 27 in the Bengaluru fixture against GT was the innings that actually decided the match. Phil Salt has been more inconsistent than the highlights suggest, but a hundred-strike-rate Salt is still a top-of-the-order weapon. Captain Rajat Patidar is leading by example with the bat and has been tactically sharp.
The bowling is where RCB have separated themselves. Josh Hazlewood’s spell against Delhi — which helped reduce DC to 8 for 6 — was the kind of new-ball performance that wins championships, not just matches. Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s late-career renaissance has given Patidar a captain’s dream: two seamers who hit the same channel over and over.
RCB’s Likely XI
|
Position |
Player |
Role |
|---|---|---|
|
Opener |
Phil Salt |
Wicketkeeper, top-order aggressor |
|
Opener |
Jacob Bethell |
Left-hand option vs new ball |
|
No. 3 |
Virat Kohli |
Anchor / chase-master |
|
No. 4 |
Rajat Patidar (c) |
Middle-order pace-setter |
|
No. 5 |
Devdutt Padikkal |
Left-hander, finisher in form |
|
No. 6 |
Liam Livingstone |
Power-hitter / part-time spin |
|
No. 7 |
Krunal Pandya |
All-rounder |
|
Pace |
Josh Hazlewood |
New-ball spearhead |
|
Pace |
Bhuvneshwar Kumar |
New-ball partner |
|
Spin |
Suyash Sharma / Yash Dayal |
Spin / left-arm pace |
|
Pace |
Lungi Ngidi |
Death overs |
Gujarat Titans: A Team Searching for Its Old Identity
The original Titans, the one that won the title in their debut season under Hardik Pandya, was built on three things: Rashid Khan strangling the middle overs, a deep batting order full of finishers, and a Mohammed Shami new-ball threat. Two of those three are gone or diminished.
What remains is one of the better top orders in the tournament. Shubman Gill, captain since 2024, has had a strange season — 32 off 24 against RCB in the last meeting, a hundred from Sai Sudharsan in the same match doing the heavy lifting at the other end. Gill’s strike rates have crept up year on year, but his role as the Titans’ anchor has not changed: he stays in, the others tee off around him.
Sai Sudharsan is the player to watch on Thursday. His 100-plus innings against RCB in the previous fixture this season was the kind of knock that confirms a young player is ready to be a fixture in India’s white-ball sides. He plays orthodox cricket — drives down the ground, late cuts, the occasional pull — without the bat-throwing risk that limits some of his peers.
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The GT bowling, however, is a concern. Mohammed Siraj has been excellent in patches and forgettable in others. Rashid Khan, now into his ninth IPL season, is no longer the auto-pick wicket-taker he was in 2022 — batters have learned to play him out, milking ones and twos rather than swinging across the line. The Titans need either Siraj’s new-ball spell or a Rashid four-wicket haul to defend totals; getting both in the same match has been rare.
GT’s Likely XI
|
Position |
Player |
Role |
|---|---|---|
|
Opener |
Shubman Gill (c) | Top-order anchor |
|
Opener |
Sai Sudharsan |
Aggressor, in form |
|
No. 3 |
Jos Buttler |
Wicketkeeper, middle-order pivot |
|
No. 4 |
Sherfane Rutherford |
Power-hitter |
|
No. 5 |
David Miller |
Finisher |
|
No. 6 |
Rahul Tewatia |
All-rounder, lower-order hitter |
|
No. 7 |
Rashid Khan |
Spin, lower-order hitting |
|
Pace |
Mohammed Siraj |
New-ball lead |
|
Pace |
Kagiso Rabada |
New-ball partner |
|
Spin |
R Sai Kishore |
Left-arm spin |
| Pace | Prasidh Krishna |
Death overs |
Head-to-Head and Recent History
|
Metric |
GT |
RCB |
|---|---|---|
|
All-time IPL meetings |
9 |
9 |
|
Wins |
5 |
4 |
|
Last meeting (24 April 2026, Bengaluru) |
Lost by 5 wickets |
Won, chasing 206 |
|
Last meeting at Ahmedabad |
Won (2024) |
— |
|
Highest score at this fixture |
228/2 (GT) |
226/4 (RCB) |
|
Lowest score at this fixture |
100 (GT, 2026) |
116 (RCB, 2023) |
Across nine completed meetings in the IPL era, the head-to-head sits 5–4 in GT’s favour, but RCB took the more recent one and have momentum. The 2024 fixture at Ahmedabad — won by GT by 6 wickets — remains the only time these two have met at this venue.
The Three Battles That Will Decide It
1. Hazlewood vs Gill in the Powerplay. RCB’s plan against the Titans last time was to attack Gill with a probing line outside off and let the field do the rest. Gill scored 32 off 24 — fine, but well below his usual tempo. If Hazlewood can repeat that, GT lose their accelerator early.
2. Kohli vs Rashid in the middle overs. This is the matchup the cameras will keep cutting to. Kohli has scored well off Rashid in recent seasons by refusing to play the sweep — instead defending balls that turn and looking only to milk ones into the leg side. If Rashid bowls a maiden over against him, GT are halfway there. If Kohli gets eight or nine off the over, the game shifts.
3. Sudharsan against the new ball under lights. If GT bat first and Sudharsan goes deep, RCB are chasing 200-plus on a slowing surface. If they bowl him out cheaply, the Titans middle order is decent but not deep enough to post a defendable score.
What to Watch For
Toss matters more than usual here. Whoever wins it will probably bowl, but the dew might not arrive as early in late April as it does in March, and a captain who reads the conditions wrong can give up 20 runs before the first ball is bowled. The temperature itself is a factor — fielders cramp, fast bowlers tire faster, and the team that handles the heat better in overs 11 through 15 is often the one that wins.
For RCB, this is a chance to make a statement: that their title defence is not a hangover. For GT, it is a chance to remind a watching country that the team that won in 2022 is still inside this squad, somewhere.
The Narendra Modi Stadium under lights, with 130,000 people in it and Kohli walking out to bat, is one of the great experiences in modern Indian sport. Thursday evening, you get all of that, plus a contest between two genuinely well-matched sides. The result is genuinely hard to call. The spectacle is not.
Match 42, Indian Premier League 2026. Toss at 7:00 PM IST, first ball at 7:30 PM IST. Live on Star Sports Network and JioCinema.


