RCB Dismantles Gujarat Titans in IPL Final as Betting Markets Move Swiftly
Royal Challengers Bengaluru dismantled Gujarat Titans in the IPL final on Saturday, with a disciplined bowling display reducing the Titans to 112 for 7 by the 17th over. RCB's chase was already underway, and betting markets on Polymarket shifted sharply as the contest tilted decisively in Bengaluru's favour.
Royal Challengers Bengaluru reduced Gujarat Titans to 112 for 7 in the 17th over during the IPL final at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Saturday, putting RCB firmly in control of a contest that betting markets had already begun repricing by the early innings.
The collapse was sharp and, for Gujarat, consequential. Having been inserted to bat first, the Titans lost three wickets inside the powerplay — Rahul Tewatia, Washington Sundar, and an unidentified batter — as RCB's opening bowlers struck with discipline and purpose. By the time the 10th over arrived, Gujarat was labouring at 54 for 3, a run rate that offered little margin for error against a line-up of RCB's firepower.
The middle overs did not bring relief. According to live reporting from Sky Sports and The Indian Express, wickets continued to fall at intervals that prevented any meaningful rebuilding. Riyan Parasar, Sheryar Sanad, and a succession of lower-order batters contributed to a slide that left Gujarat's innings structurally compromised. By the 17th over, with the score at 112 for 7, the outcome had tilted well beyond the Titans' reach.
RCB's bowlers executed with a clarity that spoke to preparation. The opening spell set the tone; the middle-overs compression followed as a consequence. Gujarat's inability to string partnerships together was not accidental — it reflected pressure applied consistently across phases, with RCB refusing to concede the loose deliveries that might have permitted a recovery.
The batting collapse, once it began, proved difficult to arrest. In T20 cricket, the loss of two or three wickets in quick succession can compress scoring options dramatically. Gujarat found themselves in precisely that position by the 10th over, with insufficient firepower remaining in the lower order to reconstruct an innings of the magnitude the situation demanded. The data from the live market on Polymarket, which tracks aggregate user predictions on match outcomes, reflected this shift in real time — as the scoreboard deteriorated, the implied probability of an RCB victory moved accordingly.
For RCB, the implications are significant. The franchise has fielded competitive sides across multiple seasons without converting playoff appearances into titles — a pattern that has become one of the more recognisable narratives in modern franchise cricket. Saturday's dismantling of Gujarat suggested a different inflection point: a team executing basic cricket with sufficient discipline to deny opponents the footholds that had previously proved decisive against them.
The structural shift matters. RCB's line-up is built around a small number of high-profile batters, a model that has historically left the side exposed when early wickets fell. A more rounded bowling performance — one that restricts opposition totals to below-par scores even when the batting does not fire — changes the franchise's risk profile considerably. Whether the coaching staff can sustain that discipline across the subsequent season will be the more interesting question.
For Gujarat, the result is a setback to a campaign that had promised more. The Titans entered the final having navigated the playoff phase with few obvious weaknesses, and the loss leaves questions about squad composition heading into the next auction cycle. The overseas contingent, in particular, will come under review — a standard post-mortem for any franchise that falls short at the final stage.
Across the league, the outcome reinforces a pattern that will shape future squad construction: T20 cricket rewards sides that can apply pressure through multiple phases, not simply outscore opponents. Teams that rely on batting firepower without the bowling infrastructure to back it up are increasingly exposed. Gujarat's collapse on Saturday was not simply a matter of poor execution — it was the product of sustained pressure applied by an RCB side that understood exactly what was required.
The timing of the betting market movement on Polymarket is worth noting. Sports-betting platforms that aggregate user predictions can shift quickly when live scorelines turn, providing a real-time signal of how the contest is being read by a distributed audience. In this instance, the market moved in step with the scoreboard — a reasonable reflection of the innings as it unfolded rather than a leading indicator of what was to come.
RCB's chase was already underway as the Titans' collapse gathered pace. By the time Gujarat reached 112 for 7, the contest had assumed a shape that Bengaluru's batting order — organised, experienced, and with enough quality to manage a moderate chase — could manage. The final result was a matter of execution from that point, not a matter of contest.
