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Royal Challengers Bengaluru's (RCB) Virat Kohli plays a shot against Rajasthan Royals (RR) during their IPL 2025 match in Jaipur on Sunday (April 13). Photo: BCCI

Salt, Kohli guide RCB to 9-wicket win over RR

Virat Kohli completed 100 half-centuries in T20 cricket and remained unbeaten on 62 off 45


Half-centuries from Phil Salt and Virat Kohli powered Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) to a convincing nine-wicket victory over Rajasthan Royals (RR) in IPL 2025 in Jaipur on Sunday (April 13).

Also read: Fastest hundreds in IPL: Abhishek enters Top 5

RCB's decision to bowl first paid off on a surface that stayed low and offered variable bounce, even as rising India opener Yashasvi Jaiswal's fluent 75 off 47 balls stood out in Rajasthan Royals total of 173/4.

Tacky wicket

On a slow, tacky Sawai Mansingh Stadium pitch where stroke-making was far from easy, Salt's counterattack stunned the hosts.

Also read: List of records in SRH vs PBKS match

He smashed six sixes and five fours in his fiery innings, putting RR's bowlers under pressure from the start.

His assault, followed by Kohli's ice-cool unbeaten 62 not out off 45 balls (4x4, 2x6), helped RCB chase down 174 with ease, finishing the job in just 17.3 overs.

This was RCB's fourth win of the season – all coming in away matches.

Salt signalled his intent from the outset, top-edging Jofra Archer for a six in the opening over and also survived a close lbw shout.

He constantly shuffled across the stumps to access the leg-side and raced to his second fifty of the season in just 28 balls, bringing the required target under 100 in the eighth over.

Catches dropped

He had moments of fortune along the way. On 23, a powerful flick ricocheted off Sandeep Sharma's outstretched hand in a tough return catch attempt.

Later, on 40, Jaiswal dropped a sharp low chance at cover, which also offered a run-out opportunity, but the stumps weren't hit. Salt made the Royals pay dearly for those lapses.

Meanwhile, Kohli was happy to play second fiddle, beginning cautiously with just seven off his first six balls.

He too had an early life – a miscue off Sandeep's slower ball was put down by Riyan Parag at mid-off, a straightforward chance. But the RCB's iconic batter regrouped quickly and settled into his anchor role.

Together, the duo stitched a 92-run opening stand, with 65 runs coming in the powerplay alone, a phase that decisively tilted the contest RCB's way.

Kohli's 100th fifty in T20s

Salt was eventually dismissed for 65, bowled by Kumar Kartikeya, leaving RCB needing just 82 from 68 balls.

From there, Kohli took charge, pacing his innings with 25 singles and picking off the boundaries with surgical precision.

He brought up his landmark 100th T20 fifty in style, dancing down the track to loft Wanindu Hasaranga straight over his head for a boundary. That over, the 15th of the innings, yielded 14 runs and brought the equation down to 28 off 30 balls to seal the result beyond doubt.

Kohli now has 100 fifties and nine centuries from 405 T20 matches.

Earlier, 23-year-old Jaiswal struck 10 fours and two sixes, handling the sluggish track with poise while others around him struggled.

After seeing off a disciplined opening burst from Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Josh Hazlewood, and Yash Dayal, Jaiswal began to open up in the fifth over with a six and a four off Dayal.

He reached his second fifty of the season in 35 balls and stitched a 56-run stand with Riyan Parag (30 off 18) that came in just 39 balls.

Samson's scratchy stay

Parag looked fluent with a six and three boundaries but couldn't capitalise on a life on 13, when Dayal dropped a regulation chance at point.

He eventually fell to Dayal's cleverly disguised back-of-the-hand slower ball, miscuing it to Kohli at short cover.

Sanju Samson (13 off 16) endured a scratchy stay, bogged down by seven dot balls and tight bowling. He survived a run-out chance early on but was eventually stumped after misjudging a low delivery from Krunal Pandya.

Jaiswal kept the scoreboard ticking with inventive strokeplay, including a lap and a reverse sweep.

He even scooped Hazlewood for a six over fine leg before falling to him in the same over, missing a sweep and getting trapped plumb in front.

In the death overs, Dhruv Jurel (35 not out off 23) played a useful cameo but took time to get going, consuming several dots early.



(With agency inputs)

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