GT vs RR: Ice-cool Rajasthan Royals win last-ball thriller in Ahmedabad to go top

India Today NaN days ago

IPL 2026, RR vs GT: Rajasthan Royals did the basics right in Ahmedabad to clinch a gripping Saturday night thriller. After posting 210, they fought back through Ravi Bishnoi's four-wicket haul and a superb death-overs effort from Jofra Archer and Tushar Deshpande.

Rajasthan Royals Tushar Deshpande

Brief Score: Rajasthan Royals (210/6 in 20 overs) beat Gujarat Titans (204/8 in 20 overs) by six runs at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Saturday. Highlights | Scorecard

Riyan Parag and Rajasthan Royals were rewarded for staying calm under pressure and getting their tactics spot on during their trip to Ahmedabad on Saturday. The former champions successfully defended a target of 210, with Tushar Deshpande nailing his yorkers in the final over of a thriller that went right down to the wire at the Narendra Modi Stadium.

Ravi Bishnoi had earlier pulled things back, picking up four wickets, when Sai Sudharsan, who struck a classy 73, threatened to take the game away. In the end, however, it was Deshpande's composure at the death that carried the Royals over the line.

With an eight-wicket hammering of Chennai Super Kings in Guwahati followed by this last-over win against a Shubman Gill-less Gujarat Titans, Rajasthan Royals have surged to the top of the table with four points from their first two matches.

Rajasthan should have wrapped things up when Gujarat slipped from 107 for 1 to 161 for 7 following a superb middle-overs burst from Bishnoi. However, Rashid Khan and Kagiso Rabada ensured Gujarat stayed in the contest, adding a 41-run stand that threatened to take the game away from the Royals.

It ultimately came down to decision-making under pressure, and young Riyan Parag, in his first season as full-time captain and amid all the chatter surrounding his appointment, proved his mettle. With two overs remaining, he had four strong options at his disposal: Jofra Archer, Nandre Burger, yorker specialist Sandeep Sharma, and Tushar Deshpande, who has built a reputation at the death during his time with Chennai Super Kings.

Parag initially turned to Tushar for the 19th over, only to change his mind at the last moment.

He threw the ball to Archer.

Gujarat, riding on a spirited lower-order partnership between Kagiso Rabada and Rashid Khan, had brought the equation down to 15 from the final two overs.

Archer then delivered a superb over, conceding just four runs and setting it up perfectly for the finish.

When Parag finally handed the ball to Tushar, choosing him over Sandeep and Burger, the Mumbai pacer responded in style. He nailed his yorkers time and again, denying Rashid and Rabada any room to free their arms.

In the end, the final over yielded just four runs as Rajasthan sealed a six-run win.

SAI'S STEADY KNOCK IN VAIN

Chasing a daunting 211, the Titans looked like favourites for the better part of the first 10 overs. In Gill's absence, Sudharsan took on the mantle of the aggressor with a sensational display of timing and placement. He treated the Ahmedabad crowd to a clinic, dispatching the bowling with effortless drives through the off-side. Sudharsan's 73 off 44 balls had the Titans cruising at 107/1, seemingly in complete command of the required run rate.

However, the moment Sudharsan was dismissed in the 11th over by Ravi Bishnoi, the innings lost its compass. What followed was a stark exposure of an out-of-form middle order that looked shorn of confidence. Glenn Phillips, one of the senior batters in the side, failed in the 13th over, chipping one from Bishnoi straight into the hands of the long-on fielder, getting out for just 3.

Washington Sundar and Rahul Tewatia, expected to provide the stability and late-innings fireworks respectively, failed to arrest the slide. Sundar managed just 4, while Tewatia's 12-run cameo was far too brief to bridge the widening gap.

The primary architect of the Titans' misery was Ravi Bishnoi. In a match-turning spell of high-quality leg-spin, Bishnoi systematically dismantled the Gujarat engine room. He finished with magnificent figures of 4/41, claiming vital wickets just as partnerships threatened to brew.

"When I miss my length, I get hit. I was trying to work on my lengths and if anyone hits off those, then no problem," Bishnoi said after a display of excellent control, relying on a simple yet highly effective skill set.

Between the 12th and 17th overs, the Titans' momentum evaporated. The lack of a steadying hand in the middle, a role usually perfected by Gill, meant that the pressure of the scoreboard became the Royals' 12th man.

A TALE OF TWO HALVES

Earlier in the evening, Rajasthan Royals combined well to post a challenging total of 210. After the young and exciting opening pair of Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi added 70 for the first wicket, the middle order struggled to maintain the momentum. At No. 3, Dhruv Jurel did more than just steady the innings, producing an eye-catching 75 off 45 balls as Rajasthan's effort became a tale of two halves.

Vaibhav was at his belligerent best once again, signalling his intent from the outset. He took on senior India pacer and T20 World Cup winner Mohammed Siraj in the opening over, striking two boundaries. He carried on from where he had left off in Guwahati earlier in the week, where he had smashed a 17-ball 52 against Chennai Super Kings.

Unlike that outing, where he played a supporting role in a low-scoring chase, Jaiswal was aggressive from the start in Ahmedabad. He ensured Rajasthan attacked from both ends during the powerplay, taking on Siraj with two boundaries and a six in the third over.

There was little margin for error for the bowlers against the two left-handed openers. Kagiso Rabada discovered that quickly when Vaibhav deftly opened the face of the bat to guide a short-of-a-length delivery through point for four in the fourth over. The 15-year-old showed that his game is not built on power alone, but also on touch and timing, qualities that have made him one of the most talked-about young cricketers since his debut last year.

Gujarat's express pacer Ashok Sharma was also taken on, conceding a boundary and a six as Vaibhav continued to play with fearless intent against high pace. By the end of the powerplay, Rajasthan had raced to 69 for no loss, laying a strong platform for the rest of the batting line-up.

Vaibhav looked set for another big score, but stand-in captain Rashid Khan altered the course of the innings. The Afghan leg-spinner banged one in short and cramped the left-hander for room. Vaibhav could only hit it straight to Glenn Phillips at deep midwicket.

There was a sense of relief among the Gujarat Titans supporters as a Sooryavanshi onslaught, which had threatened to take the game away early, was halted before it could fully unfold.

The narrative of the back end, however, shifted from the batters to the raw, intimidating pace of Gujarat's Ashok Sharma. The 23-year-old pacer produced a spell of visceral hostility, breaching the 150 kph mark three times in a single over.

On the final ball of the 16th, Ashok unleashed a searing yorker to Jurel that clocked a staggering 154.2 kph – officially the fastest delivery of the 2026 season.

Despite the record-breaking heat from Ashok, Dhruv Jurel remained unfazed. Jurel played an innings of two halves, initially navigating the mid-innings squeeze before launching a calculated assault in the death overs. He brought up his fifty in 29 balls and eventually finished with a magnificent 75 off 42 deliveries, peppered with five fours and five sixes. His ability to ramp Sharma's extreme pace and find the gaps against Kagiso Rabada ensured the Royals pushed past the 200-mark.

Though Ashok eventually removed the dangerous Shimron Hetmyer to finish with 1/37, and Rabada (2/42) chipped in with late wickets, Jurel's masterclass ensured Rajasthan set a target that proved just beyond Gujarat's reach in a thrilling six-run victory.

- Ends

Published By:

Akshay Ramesh

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