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From “Chokers” to Champions: How Royal Challengers Bengaluru Reinvented Themselves Into IPL’s Most Balanced Side

For years, Royal Challengers Bengaluru were viewed as the IPL's great paradox - a franchise filled with superstars, massive fan support and explosive batting, yet repeatedly falling short when it mattered most.

But since the 2025 season, something fundamental has changed.

Royal Challengers Bengaluru

RCB are no longer simply a team built around Virat Kohli brilliance or top-order firepower. They have transformed into arguably the most balanced and tactically mature side in IPL 2026, and their rise has been driven by a complete rethink of how a winning T20 team should function.

After finally ending their title drought in 2025, RCB have carried that momentum straight into IPL 2026, where they currently sit near the top of the table and look like one of the strongest contenders once again.

The mega auction changed everything for Royal Challengers Bengaluru

The biggest shift came at the 2025 mega auction.

For years, RCB often chased star names and batting-heavy combinations, leaving them vulnerable in pressure situations. But the 2025 rebuild focused less on glamour and more on structure.

Instead of assembling a top-heavy lineup, RCB prioritised role clarity, depth and experienced Indian players who could stabilise the side across phases.

Director of Cricket Mo Bobat and head coach Andy Flower moved aggressively towards creating a sustainable T20 system rather than depending on moments of individual brilliance.

The strategy was visible immediately.

RCB invested heavily in experienced Indian players like Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Krunal Pandya, Jitesh Sharma and Devdutt Padikkal. None arrived with the kind of blockbuster hype usually associated with RCB signings, but collectively they gave the side far greater balance.

That balance ultimately helped deliver the franchise's maiden IPL title in 2025.

Royal Challengers Bengaluru are no longer dependent on Virat Kohli alone

One of the biggest changes in this new RCB setup has been the reduction of overdependence on Kohli.

While Kohli remains the emotional and batting anchor of the side, RCB's middle order now contributes consistently instead of collapsing after early wickets.

Phil Salt's arrival completely altered their powerplay dynamics. His aggressive starts allow Kohli to pace innings differently, while Rajat Patidar has evolved into a calm middle-order stabiliser and leader.

The numbers reflect the transformation.

RCB's scoring pattern is now far more even across all phases of the innings. Instead of slowing dramatically during middle overs - something that plagued previous RCB sides - they now maintain scoring pressure consistently.

Their batting lineup also bats deeper than previous seasons, with finishers and all-rounders contributing regularly.

In modern T20 cricket, that adaptability matters more than having one superstar-heavy top order.

The real difference has been the bowling

Historically, bowling was often RCB's biggest weakness. That has changed dramatically in IPL 2026.

The pairing of Josh Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar Kumar has given RCB one of the most dangerous new-ball attacks in the league.

RCB lead the tournament in powerplay wickets this season, and their ability to strike consistently inside the first six overs has transformed matches early.

What makes them especially dangerous is their versatility.

Hazlewood's hard lengths and bounce complement Bhuvneshwar's swing and seam movement perfectly, while Krunal Pandya and the spinners have controlled middle overs efficiently rather than hunting only wickets.

Even more importantly, RCB now look capable of defending totals - something older versions of the franchise consistently struggled with.

Rajat Patidar's calm leadership has changed Royal Challengers Bengaluru

Rajat Patidar's captaincy has quietly become one of the defining stories of IPL 2026.

RCB sides of the past often carried enormous emotional pressure, with the franchise frequently labelled "chokers" whenever knockout conversations emerged.

Under Patidar, however, the team appears calmer and tactically clearer.

There is less panic, less dependence on miracle innings and far greater trust in systems.

That shift in mentality has become visible during close games as well. RCB now regularly win tense contests while both defending and chasing targets.

The dressing room also appears more stable than previous seasons, with experienced figures like Kohli, Flower and Bobat helping maintain clarity around roles.

Even Chinnaswamy is no longer hurting them

For years, Bengaluru's home ground was viewed as a disadvantage because of the tiny boundaries and batting-friendly conditions.

RCB have worked around that too.

The franchise reportedly altered pitch preparation and slowed portions of the outfield to better support their bowling attack, especially seamers who rely on cutters and hard lengths.

That tactical flexibility has made them a more complete side both home and away.

RCB now look like a modern T20 machine

The biggest difference between old RCB and current RCB is that the franchise finally resembles a modern T20 team rather than a collection of star players.

They now possess:

  • aggressive powerplay batting
  • middle-order stability
  • elite new-ball bowling
  • experienced Indian depth
  • tactical flexibility
  • multiple match-winners across departments

Most importantly, they no longer rely on one player rescuing them every game.

Virat Kohli still remains the face of the franchise, but IPL 2026 has shown that RCB's success is now being built on structure, planning and balance - the exact ingredients that title-winning T20 teams usually possess.

For perhaps the first time in their IPL history, RCB do not just look entertaining. They look sustainable.

Story first published: Thursday, May 14, 2026, 14:15 [IST]
Other articles published on May 14, 2026
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