Match Analysis

Punjab Kings bat without brakes to equal record for 200-plus totals

Wadhera and a line-up with an uncapped batting core earn a win that will make the PBKS management feel confident

Chawla: The way Wadhera paced his innings was most impressive

Chawla: The way Wadhera paced his innings was most impressive

The PBKS batter smashed 70 off just 37 balls against RR, and 50 of those runs came in boundaries

A bit of reverse swing and a three-for for Harpreet Brar helped Punjab Kings (PBKS) survive a double-barrel onslaught of Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Suryavanshi, but that these things were even a factor after Rajasthan Royals' (RR) biggest powerplay ever in the IPL was because PBKS had put on over 200 for a record-equalling sixth time in a single IPL.

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If that by itself is not remarkable enough, they did so from three down in 3.1 overs: their 219 was the highest any IPL team has managed from three down inside the first four overs. If you have watched the IPL for long enough, you know how the commentators talk about taking three wickets in the powerplay as a big indicator that you are going to win.

More often than not, that happens because the batting team bats like it have lost three wickets. PBKS didn't. They batted like a side that had seven wickets in hand. Shreyas Iyer and Nehal Wadhera, both of whom started the fourth-wicket stand on 0 off 0, hit a boundary off the second ball they faced. Both with aerial shots.

When Riyan Parag was brought on in the seventh over, Wadhera, a left-hand batter, didn't let him just bowl, making room and chipping over extra coover. There was no period of rebuilding, which in T20 parlance means accepting what the opposition is happy to give you. No. 6 batter Shashank Singh, who walked in as early as the 11th over, followed in the same vein.

In IPL 2025, PBKS have all but made their first playoffs in 11 years, but their coach Ricky Ponting will be especially pleased that they have done so with a match where they lost their big hitters early and were missing their entire Aussie batting contingent.

Nehal Wadhera took a different approach to rebuilding after three early wickets  BCCI

"Talks have been pretty clear," Wadhera said during the innings break. "No matter what the situation is, you need to punish the loose ball. That is what we have been doing, and that is the only reason we have been scoring above 200. That is the positive mindset among all the team-mates that is helping us cross the line every time."undefined

RR head coach Rahul Dravid said PBKS were 20 above par for the conditions. The 70 off 37 that Wadhera scored, hitting five sixes and five fours, not letting the spinners sneak in a cheap over despite the early loss of wickets, didn't sound like he had done something out of the ordinary. "The preparation of such things happens in the nets," Wadhera said. "Every player out here, the way they play in the nets is quite similar to the way they play in the game."

This is, of course, only Wadhera's fourth score of 50 or more in three years of the IPL, but it should be no surprise that he is enjoying his best IPL in a line-up that gives him more to do than Mumbai Indians did. He is averaging 35 and striking at 157.3 this year. Wadhera and Shashank have come good at a time when PBKS were dealing with uncertainty wrought in by the break in the IPL. A slip here can be the difference between the top two and just a playoffs finish.

For a rare side wanting to bat first, this was a crucial game to win with a completely uncapped batting core. The only international in that top six, Iyer, made only a small contribution. The leadership will now feel confident of sticking with the way they have been playing.

Nehal WadheraRajasthan RoyalsPunjab KingsPBKS vs RRIndian Premier League

Sidharth Monga is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo