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Andy Flower took RCB job because an empty trophy cabinet ‘excited' him; now, he walks the talk with champion's medal

Andy Flower took RCB job because an empty trophy cabinet ‘excited' him; now, he walks the talk with champion's medal

Hindustan Times3 days ago

Over a year ago, when Andy Flower became head coach of Royal Challengers Bengaluru, the team was still striving to overcome years of missed opportunities. The women's team had just lifted their maiden Women's Premier League title under Smriti Mandhana. However, rather than being under heightened pressure to deliver, Flower relished the challenge, indicating that it was among the major reasons he signed up for the role in the first place.
'It is one of the main reasons I wanted to take this job,' he told Hindustan TImes last year. 'It gives me a very exciting opportunity to see if we can do something special with RCB.'
Flower was locked in on the title even before his RCB debut as head coach. And one year on, he delivered.
For a team synonymous with near-misses, flamboyant stars, and a 'Royally Loyal' fanbase – as Virat Kohli called them after the title win – Flower's arrival marked the beginning of a fundamental shift. Not just in results, but in the ethos of how RCB built and played their cricket.
One of the words Flower repeatedly used during his interaction with this publication was 'simplifying' the process. Whether it be on the field, or off it. And after the 2024 season, he put that philosophy into action, starting anew and transforming the approach from the ground up.
RCB had long operated by banking on familiar names and legacy reputations, a pitfall the franchise had historically succumbed to. During the mid-2010s, the Virat Kohli-AB de Villiers-Chris Gayle trio defined RCB's brand – dazzling, star-studded, but flawed. The team was too top-heavy, often lacking depth in bowling and flexibility in tactics.
Under Flower, the 2025 auction signalled a clean break from that template. Despite Indian heavyweights like Rishabh Pant, KL Rahul, and Shreyas Iyer being up for grabs, RCB resisted the temptation. Instead, they built a squad around role clarity, targeting versatile, experienced, and rather unglamorous names who fit the team's strategic needs.
"The opportunity of winning a tournament is right there in front of us, but my personal view of taking on a challenge like that is always simplifying the route,' Flower told this publication.
They invested in an Indian core of Krunal Pandya, Jitesh Sharma, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, and Suyash Sharma, and put their faith in overseas players like Phil Salt, Josh Hazlewood, Tim David, and Romario Shepherd. Most of these weren't headline-making buys, but they were handpicked with a clear thought process. Each of them played defining roles at various stages of RCB's victorious campaign.
'I thought we did beautifully in picking a very balanced squad, knowing what sort of players we want and which player would fit in which role. As we were picking the team, we used to put players in certain roles and see how they fit,' Dinesh Karthik, the side's mentor, had said about the squad.
RCB left many in shock when they let go of Will Jacks at the auction. It was a gutsy move, but Phil Salt repaid the faith with a string of explosive starts.
The backroom team's approach also extended beyond auction-day calls. When Devdutt Padikkal was ruled out due to injury, the management opted for Mayank Agarwal, a seasoned campaigner with recent domestic form. Agarwal's 41* in a crucial chase against LSG, alongside Jitesh Sharma's whirlwind 85*, vindicated RCB's decision. In the final, almost every batter in RCB's lineup played a stop-start knock, with Mayank also contributing with an important 24.
Even off the field, the environment Flower sought to create was deliberate. As Bobat explained, "For Andy and I, creating a sort of environment where people feel safe, where they feel backed, where they feel like they're accountable for their own decisions, and where they're able to hopefully showcase their strengths – that's the key bit," said Bobat.
One of the boldest moves RCB made this season was handing the captaincy reins to Rajat Patidar. The decision raised eyebrows, as the franchise handed the captaincy to a player with no significant leadership pedigree at this level.
But it worked.
Patidar grew into the role, commanding respect through consistency and calmness. Flower and Bobat were careful in assembling a group that didn't revolve around one or two leaders. That reflected in the side's performances, too, with almost every game seeing different players emerging to lift RCB to victories.
The result was a team that did not panic. Whether it was bouncing back from early defeats, surviving close chases, or defending tight totals, RCB this season never looked rattled.
Their bowling unit, once seen as a liability in the previous seasons, held its nerve in crunch moments. Bhuvneshwar and Hazlewood brought control with the new ball, while Krunal and Shepherd proved valuable as utility players.
In the final against Punjab Kings, RCB defended 191 with a performance that mirrored the very philosophy Flower had instilled. Calm, clinical, unflinching.
In many ways, this wasn't just RCB's title. It was Andy Flower's vindication. A reminder that behind every trophy is a system: a mix of right people, right roles, and the right temperament. What made this triumph even sweeter was how it looped back to Flower's initial words, when he confidently declared that joining a side with no IPL title is an 'exciting' prospect.
That hunger to chase the unfinished made all the difference.

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Should Gukesh rue the missed chance to win title or take heart that he beat Carlsen and Arjun in classical chess in Norway?
Should Gukesh rue the missed chance to win title or take heart that he beat Carlsen and Arjun in classical chess in Norway?

Indian Express

time32 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Should Gukesh rue the missed chance to win title or take heart that he beat Carlsen and Arjun in classical chess in Norway?

After two weeks of pulling rabbits out of the hat and grinding his way to wins even when he was in worse positions from the start of games, there were no more rabbits left to be found for Gukesh Dommaraju. The 19-year-old world champion had started the final round of the Norway Chess tournament with a realistic chance of winning the title, starting just 0.5 points behind leader Magnus Carlsen. But he ended the tournament in third spot, after losing the round 10 game to USA's Fabiano Caruana, who pipped him to second spot in the standings, behind title winner Magnus Carlsen. It was a gripping end to a tournament that had been billed as the first Carlsen vs Gukesh clash in classical chess since the Indian teenager's coronation as world champion. In what was one of the most dramatic days of chess this year, Gukesh's final game against Caruana was a perfect highlight reel of his whole tournament in Stavanger: he started off worse than his opponent, then through sheer tenacity found some incredible resources to gain an edge, and then found himself in the clutches of time trouble. While he ended third in the standings, the event saw Gukesh beat Magnus Carlsen and Arjun Erigaisi for the first time in classical chess. The win over Carlsen was sweeter for more reasons than one: after defeating the world champion from India, Carlsen had posted 'You come for the king, you better not miss' — a line from HBO's popular series The Wire. Gukesh's second, Grzegorz Gajewski, had also told Indian media: 'As a world champion, he keeps facing these comments that, 'ok, you're the world champion only because Magnus didn't play. You know, you try not to hear those comments. But then you lose to him, and then you lose to him again, and that's not a bit pleasant.' Those first-ever wins over Carlsen and Arjun notwithstanding, Gukesh will be smarting. This is, after all, the second classical tournament since he became world champion in December last year — the first being the Tata Steel tournament at the start of the year in Wijk aan Zee — where he has been within touching distance of winning the title coming into the final round and then letting it slip. Gukesh's desperation to beat Caruana and win the title was apparent early on. He started to take risks in the game on Friday from as early as move 4 — playing 4.h6, to signal his intent to fight for the title. Caruana, who also had a chance to win the title, was not about to be left behind. Right after Gukesh castled long, the American's b pawn marched down the board (14…b4) towards the black king. By the 17th move, Gukesh had 30 minutes lesser on his clock compared to the American. Caruana also had an edge in the game as per the eval bar. At multiple times at this event Gukesh has been in trouble due to the time control used at this event — two hours with no increments and then 10 seconds added from move 41. By the 34th move from both players, the American had surged ahead as per the eval bar. At this stage, Gukesh had an additional pawn and a rook while the American had a knight and a bishop still on the battlefield. Carlsen, meanwhile, was struggling on the adjoining board against Arjun. A win for Arjun against the Norwegian would have meant that Gukesh could win the title with just a draw in the classical portion against Caruana. Gukesh was under massive time trouble by the 45th move, his time having trickled down to 15 seconds. That's when he got a lifeline as Caruana blundered with 47.f4. This left Gukesh's pawn on the d file to make a run to promote to a queen. 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Rahul, Karun and India seeking a batting high in England
Rahul, Karun and India seeking a batting high in England

Hindustan Times

time34 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Rahul, Karun and India seeking a batting high in England

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China says willing to improve communication with countries on rare earth controls
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China says willing to improve communication with countries on rare earth controls

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