Eden Gardens finally turned purple with a million fluttering flags on Sunday afternoon. In a game that felt like a slow-burn thriller, the Kolkata Knight Riders managed to decisively snap their six-game losing streak, securing their first win of the season in seven attempts.
After the Rajasthan Royals appeared firmly in command following a dominant PowerPlay, the game was dramatically reversed by KKR’s mystery spinners and a determined, unbeaten fifty from crowd favorite Rinku Singh. On a slow surface where scoring runs was a struggle, KKR’s result-driven strategy ultimately proved successful, securing victory with four wickets in hand and just two deliveries remaining.
Rajasthan Royals’ innings unfolded in two distinct phases. Teenage prodigy Vaibhav Sooryavanshi (46) and Yashasvi Jaiswal (39) appeared poised to drive the visitors to a huge score, racing to 63/0 in the PowerPlay. But once the field spread out, KKR’s spin pair Varun Chakravarthy and Sunil Narine transformed the surface into a minefield.
The duo choked RR’s middle order, returning combined figures of 5 for 40 in eight overs. Once the opening partnership was broken, RR imploded, losing 9 wickets for just 74 runs. Kartik Tyagi (3/22) then ruthlessly wiped out the tail, leaving RR with a total that captain Riyan Parag conceded was well below par.
| Statistic | Rajasthan Royals (RR) | Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) |
|---|---|---|
| Final Score | 155/9 (20 Overs) | 156/6 (19.4 Overs) |
| Top Batter | Sooryavanshi (46 off 28) | Rinku Singh (50 off 33)* |
| Top Bowler | Varun Chakravarthy (3/14) | Ravindra Jadeja (2/5) |
| Boundary Drought | 26 balls (Middle overs) | — |
| Result | — | KKR won by 4 wickets |
The run chase started disastrously for KKR. Jofra Archer and Nandre Burger made early inroads, dismissing Seifert and Rahane for zero. The standout moment of the night, however, was Dhruv Jurel’s extraordinary stumping to remove Cameron Green. Jurel flung himself a long way down the leg side and, while sprawled on the turf, reverse-flicked the ball onto the stumps, a piece of brilliance that stunned even the KKR supporters.
But the real spotlight ultimately fell on Rinku Singh. Given a life on just 8 when Nandre Burger put down a straightforward catch, Rinku made Rajasthan Royals pay heavily for that mistake. In tandem with Anukul Roy (an unbeaten 29 off 16), he managed the climbing required run rate through a blend of smart placement and powerful strokes.
When runs don't come, you start thinking. It was not that I was hesitating in hitting my shots. The mindset was to take it till the end.Rinku Singh on his mindset
We assessed it was a 170 wicket. So we were dead under par. It was our game. No excuses there. We can't be dropping catches. We can't be bowling lines that favour the batsmen.Riyan Parag on the defeat
With nine runs required from the final over, RR captain Parag handed the ball to 19-year-old debutant legspinner Brijesh Sharma. It was a high-pressure introduction to top-level cricket. Rinku replied with a measured onslaught:
Placement: A short-of-length ball pulled wide of short fine leg for four.
Confidence: A slash over extra cover for four more.
Finale: A short delivery that Rinku top-edged for a six over the keeper to reach his fifty and seal the win.
Jurel standard: Pundits compared Jurel’s stumping of Green to legendary efforts by Sanga and Dhoni, a contender for the best stumping in IPL history.
Mystery duo: Varun Chakravarthy (3/14) and Sunil Narine (2/26) proved that on a slow track, they are still KKR's most potent weapons.
Long wait: This was KKR's first victory in seven attempts this season, sparking emotional celebrations in the dugout.
Sooryavanshi spark: Despite the loss, 15-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi precisely, dissected the KKR pace attack early on, hitting five fours and two sixes.
For the Kolkata Knight Riders, it felt like a long-awaited release. By finally figuring out how to edge a tight contest on a slow surface, they have outlined a template for staying competitive in IPL 2026. For Rajasthan, attention now needs to shift back to sharpening their middle-order output and fielding, especially their catching. In a competition where totals above 200 are increasingly routine, this low-scoring nail-biter showed that the craft of a well-executed chase remains very much intact.