Hand-picked stories you can't miss

The question Rajat Patidar must answer before May 31 is simple on paper and complicated in practice: does Phil Salt walk back into the RCB XI for the IPL 2026 final, or does the combination that dismantled Gujarat Titans by 92 runs stay intact? Salt is fully fit. The Narendra Modi Stadium pitch favours power-hitting. And RCB have one overseas slot to play with. That one decision shapes how their batting looks in the biggest game of the season.
Before a finger injury ended his IPL 2026 league phase on April 18, Phil Salt was exceptional. He scored 202 runs in six innings at a strike rate of 168.33, with a high score of 78 against the Mumbai Indians. Those aren’t good powerplay numbers; they’re elite ones. He missed the entire playoff build-up, including Qualifier 1 at Dharamsala, where RCB posted 254 for 5 without him. He was confirmed fully fit ahead of the final, having been kept under observation by management through the qualifier. Patidar’s caution there was deliberate; he preserved Salt as a final option while testing whether the settled XI could deliver. It did, convincingly. Now he has to choose.
| Player | Role | Overseas Slot | Q1 Status |
| Phil Salt | Opener/WK | Yes | Fit, not selected |
| Jacob Bethell | Top-order bat | Yes | Unavailable |
| Tim David | Finisher | Yes | Played |
| Josh Hazlewood | Bowler | Yes | Played |
| Jacob Duffy | Bowler | Yes | Played |
| Romario Shepherd | All-rounder | Yes | Impact sub |
RCB used three overseas slots in Qualifier 1: Tim David, Jacob Duffy, and Josh Hazlewood. Jacob Bethell, who had replaced Salt across seven league matches, scoring 96 runs at a strike rate of 124.68, is ruled out with a finger injury and England national commitments. This means the Salt decision is not Salt versus Bethell. It’s Salt versus Duffy, batting firepower at the top against bowling depth at the back. That’s the actual dilemma.
The Narendra Modi Stadium pitch changes the calculus significantly. Average first-innings scores at the venue have ranged between 160 and 195 across IPL 2026, with the surface slowing as the season progressed. Pacers get movement early; spinners assist from overs 10 onward. More critically, dew is a major factor in evening matches here. Chasing teams have won 14 of 24 historical IPL matches at this ground. In IPL 2026 overall, fielding-first teams have dominated, winning around 62% of matches. If the RCB field second and dew arrives, their bowling becomes harder to execute precisely. That means powerplay batting in the first innings becomes the primary weapon. Salt at a strike rate of 168.33 versus Bethell’s 124.68 from IPL 2026 is a difference of potentially 15 to 20 extra runs in six overs, on a flat surface with dew expected, that gap is decisive.
Patidar’s selections in IPL 2026 have been vindicated more often than not. Benching Salt for Qualifier 1 in favour of a settled combination worked. Venkatesh Iyer’s 19 off 7 balls gave RCB the launch they needed in Dharamsala, and the 92-run win was comprehensive. But Dharamsala and Ahmedabad are fundamentally different surfaces. Patidar confirmed before Qualifier 1 that Salt was fit but kept under observation; that wasn’t indecision, it was optionality. He held the card deliberately. Now the surface is flat, dew is likely, and RCB’s final opponent arrives off Qualifier 2 with five days less rest. Against a fatigued pace attack, Salt’s ability to clear the boundary from ball one is a different proposition than it would have been in the hills at Dharamsala.
RCB have had five full days of rest since Qualifier 1. Their opponents come into the final having played a knockout game within that window, and pace bowlers carrying that fatigue concede more in powerplays. A fresh Salt against tired seam bowling in the first six overs at Ahmedabad is a match-up that writes its own argument. Dropping Duffy removes a bowling option, but RCB showed in Qualifier 1 that Hazlewood, Bhuvneshwar, Krunal, and Rasikh Salam can restrict effectively without a fifth specialist. The dew data, the pitch profile, the opponent’s fatigue, and Salt’s own strike rate all point in the same direction. Patidar has every reason to bring Salt back, and the RCB playing XI IPL 2026 final selection that maximises batting firepower over bowling depth is the one that fits this surface.
As the race intensifies, the Sports Live Hub (SLH) provides the most comprehensive gateway for global cricket fans to follow the lPL Matches.
Our hub sports live stream is optimized for high-intensity T20 action. By leveraging advanced server technology, SLH ensures that your stream remains stable even during the highest viewership peaks. Watch the battle without the frustration of buffering or lag.
The sport hub live streaming interface on SLH offers more than just a video feed. Fans can access a real-time AI Overview of the match, featuring live win-probability shifts, player impact scores, and ball-by-ball tactical analysis. It is the perfect companion for viewers who want to stay ahead of the game with professional-grade insights.
We are committed to making cricket accessible to a worldwide audience. By visiting the SLH portal, users can find verified pathways to watch sports live for free through authorized regional partner trials, free-to-air digital gateways, and promotional streaming passes. Join millions of fans globally as we witness the drama of the IPL unfold.
What is RCB’s likely playing XI for the IPL 2026 final?
RCB’s likely XI is Virat Kohli, Phil Salt, Devdutt Padikkal, Rajat Patidar (c), Jitesh Sharma (wk), Tim David, Krunal Pandya, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Josh Hazlewood, Rasikh Salam, and Jacob Duffy or Romario Shepherd. The final XI has not been officially confirmed as of May 29, 2026.
Will Phil Salt play in the IPL 2026 final?
Phil Salt is confirmed fully fit and available for the final after recovering from a finger injury sustained on April 18 against the Delhi Capitals. He was left out of the Qualifier 1 XI despite being fit, with Patidar keeping him as a final option.
What is the pitch report for Narendra Modi Stadium for the IPL 2026 final?
The Ahmedabad pitch is batting-friendly with average first-innings scores between 160 and 195, pacers effective early, and spinners assisting from overs 10 onward. Chasing teams have won 14 of 24 historical IPL matches at this venue, with dew a major factor in evening games.
Who are RCB’s available overseas players for the IPL 2026 final?
Phil Salt, Tim David, Josh Hazlewood, Romario Shepherd, and Jacob Duffy are all available for selection. Jacob Bethell is ruled out due to a finger injury and England national commitments.
Where can I watch live sports for free online for IPL?
The match is available for live streaming on Sports Live Hub (SLH).
cricket
cricket
cricketNo articles found for Volleyball
Try a different filter or clear it to see all articles.