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IPL 2026 WRAP: Kohli’s double crown, teen sensation stuns

cricket02 June 2026 10:53| © MWP
By:Brendon Atwell
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Royal Challengers Bengaluru finished the league phase with nine wins from 14 matches, sitting pretty at the top of the table. Gujarat Titans, also with nine wins, emerged as their opponent for the title decider after a fairytale playoff run that saw them topple Rajasthan Royals in Qualifier 2.

But the story of IPL 2026 belongs to one narrative: a 15-year-old batting sensation who rewrote what's possible in T20 cricket, and a tournament that proved consistency still trumps flash when it matters most.

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MATCH OF THE IPL

Rajasthan Royals versus Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Eliminator at New Chandigarh on 27 May captured everything that makes playoff cricket special. The Royals posted 243, built around Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's outrageous 97 from 29 balls - 50 off 16 balls, nine fours, five sixes.

The kind of innings that changes how people think about T20 cricket. But it nearly wasn't enough. SRH looked competitive until Jofra Archer took the new ball and dismantled them - three powerplay wickets. By the end, SRH collapsed to 196 all out, losing by 47 runs. Sooryavanshi's brilliance won the headlines, but Archer's bowling won the match.

BATTER

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi of Rajasthan Royals blazed through IPL 2026 with 776 runs at an average of 48.50. But the aggregate tells only half the story. The 50 off 15 against CSK. The 78 off 26 against RCB. The 97 off 29 in the Eliminator. The 96 off 47 in Qualifier 2. He's 15 years old. Younger than some franchise water bottles, yet he's been the tournament's most dominant force - a player who redefined the powerplay and showed that age is nothing but a number when you have talent, temperament, and swagger. His rise will define Indian cricket for the next decade.

BOWLER

Kagiso Rabada won the Purple Cap, finishing the 2026 IPL with 29 wickets from 17 matches. The Proteas quick was relentless - mixing pace, movement, and an almost supernatural ability to pick up crucial wickets at the death. Early in the tournament, Rabada seemed to lose his death-over yorkers.

Then, gradually, he found it again - not raw pace, but something better: understanding, variation, and the art of making batters wait. By the business end, he was the most dangerous bowler on either team, capable of using his experience to adapt to any environment. At 31, he's still learning new tricks.

PERFORMANCE

Sameer Rizvi of the Delhi Capitals delivered rounded excellence when his team needed it most. Knocks of 70*, 90, and 51 across three matches showed his ability to bat under pressure and understand the match situation. These weren't explosive innings - they were intelligent, measured performances from a player who understood that winning T20 matches is about being there at the end.

INDIAN PLAYER

Virat Kohli accumulated 675 runs through quiet consistency. He made five half-centuries and one ton and was part of opening partnerships that set the tone for RCB's dominance. But it was the final where Kohli truly arrived. An unbeaten 75 from 42 balls - nine fours, three sixes - took RCB to their second successive IPL title.

There was no flash, just trademark cover drives, pulled boundaries, and a sixth-sense understanding of when to accelerate. By the time RCB got home with 12 balls remaining, Kohli had shown exactly why 675 runs translate into silverware.

OVERSEAS PLAYER

Jos Buttler from the Gujarat Titans rediscovered his mojo from Match 9 onwards - scoring 60 off 37 against Lucknow Super Giants, 52 off 27 against Rajasthan Royals, and a crucial 99 off 32 in Qualifier 2. His willingness to adapt - anchoring against quality bowling, punishing weaker attacks - made him one of the tournament's most consistent overseas performers. By the time GT made the final, Buttler had played his way back into form.

SOUTH AFRICAN PLAYER

Kagiso Rabada was the standout Protea performer, finishing as the tournament's leading wicket-taker with 29 scalps and claiming the Purple Cap. His relentlessness throughout - hitting blockhole yorkers at the death, extracting movement in powerplay - made him the bowler every team wanted removed from the attack. South Africa's contribution to IPL 2026 will be remembered through Rabada's excellence.

OUCH

Chennai Super Kings' opening partnerships continued their nightmare throughout IPL 2026, culminating in a walloping at the hands of Mumbai Indians.

Ruturaj Gaikwad started in woeful form, and by the time CSK finished, they'd scored just 104 chasing 160 against Mumbai. CSK eventually finished eighth, missing out on the postseason entirely. For a franchise with such a storied history, it was historic. The fifth time they've finished outside the top four in their 17-season history - but in the modern era, a humbling moment.

BEST LOSER

KL Rahul put on a masterclass that deserved to win a match, but came agonisingly close to heartbreak instead. His unbeaten 92 off 48 balls against Gujarat Titans showcased everything that makes him a world-class batter - timing, placement, and the ability to build an innings under pressure.

Delhi Capitals chased 211 and Rahul's brilliance nearly got them over the line, but GT held their nerve and won by just a single run in one of the tournament's most thrilling encounters. It was a performance that will haunt Rahul and DC for the right reasons, not because he failed, but because despite one of the tournament's best individual batting displays, his team came up just short. That's the cruel mathematics of T20 cricket.

TALKING POINT

The rise of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi fundamentally changes how Indian cricket approaches T20 development. A 15-year-old showing that age is irrelevant when you have talent and temperament. The question now isn't whether he'll play for India - it's when.

But IPL 2026 raised deeper questions about T20 batting philosophy. We've seen traditional, patient accumulation from Sameer Rizvi work alongside Sooryavanshi's explosion-based cricket. We've seen Virat Kohli prove that consistency matters. The tournament showed that T20 cricket is a spectrum, and the best teams understand when to shift along it.

THE FINAL

Virat Kohli delivered when it mattered most. An unbeaten 75 from 42 balls took RCB to their second successive IPL title, chasing down GT's modest 155 with clinical precision. GT batted first and never found their rhythm. Shubman Gill looked uncomfortable against RCB's pace. Washington Sundar's 50 off 37 was a rare bright spot, but 155 was always gettable.

RCB's chase was methodical. Kohli and Iyer gave the defending champions a fast start. When Iyer fell, RCB looked to falter as Devdutt Padikkal (1), Rajat Patidar (15) and Krunal Pandya fell quickly. However, Kohli took the game by the scruff of the neck and, despite a dramatic caught-out review in the 15th over that went RCB's way, by the end of the 18th over, the title was in the bag.

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