SWOT analysis of Royal Challengers Bengaluru: RCB’s report card ahead of the IPL 2026

Samira Vishwas

Tezzbuzz|18-03-2026

The wait is over, and the ‘Ee Sala Cup Namde’ chants have finally transformed into a triumphant reality. Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) enter the IPL 2026 season not as the perennial underdogs or the almost team, but as the defending champions. After a historic 2025 campaign where they clinically dismantled Punjab Kings in the final to lift their maiden trophy, the narrative in the Garden City has shifted from hope to expectation. Under the shrewd leadership of Rajat Patidar and the tactical mastery of head coach Andy FlowerRCB have shed its image of a top-heavy, volatile unit to become a balanced, winning machine.

As we approach the 2026 season, the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium is buzzing with a different kind of energy. The pressure of breaking the jinx is gone, replaced by the formidable challenge of building a dynasty. With a squad that balances the evergreen brilliance of Virat Kohli with the explosive middle-order depth of Phil Salt and Jitesh Sharmathe question on every RCB fan’s heart is simple: Can RCB defend their title and make it two in a row?

RCB’s quest for the second title in IPL 2026

Defending an IPL title is a feat only achieved by the elite, Chennai Super Kings and Mumbai Indians. For RCB to join this exclusive club, they have doubled down on stability. Unlike previous years where the franchise often hit the reset button, the 2026 strategy has been about surgical reinforcements. By retaining 17 players from their championship-winning squad, the management has signalled total faith in the chemistry that brought them glory in 2025.

The addition of Venkatesh Iyer for a whopping ₹7 crore at the auction is a masterstroke designed to provide the tactical flexibility RCB has lacked for a decade. With Iyer, the team gains a bridge between the top and middle order, as well as a medium-pace option that allows them to play an extra specialist bowler if needed. The goal is clear: don’t fix what isn’t broken, but reinforce the walls to withstand the inevitable counter-attack from the rest of the league.

RCB’s SWOT analysis for IPL 2026

To understand if RCB can truly replicate their success, we must dive deep into the four pillars of their current ecosystem. This SWOT analysis breaks down the internal and external factors that will define their 2026 journey.

Strengths:

  • The “Kohli-Patidar-Salt” reliability: Kohli remains the heartbeat of the team, coming off a solid 2025 season where he played the anchor role to perfection whereas Salt is known for his intent blast in powerplay. Alongside them, Captain Patidar has matured into a leader who leads by example, often playing the high-impact knocks under pressure that were once RCB’s Achilles’ heel.
  • The finisher’s vlub: With Jitesh, Romario Shepherdand Tim David in the mix, RCB possesses one of the most terrifying death-overs lineups in the league. This depth allows the top order to play with more freedom, knowing there is significant firepower to follow.
  • Death bowling mastery: The resurgence of Yash Dayal and the veteran experience of Bhuvneshwar Kumar provide RCB with a rare luxury domestic pacers who can nail yorkers in the final three overs at the Chinnaswamy.

Weaknesses:

  • Lack of Wrist-Spin Variety: While Suyash Sharma is a brilliant find and a genuine wicket-taker, the squad is remarkably thin on leg-spin backups. In a tournament as long as the IPL, an injury to Suyash could leave a massive hole in the middle-overs wicket-taking department.
  • The fragility of the pace attack: Josh Hazlewood is a world-class operator, but his history of fitness issues is well-documented. If Hazlewood or the newly signed Jacob Duffy aren’t available for the full season, the burden on the Indian domestic pacers might become unsustainable.

Opportunities:

  • U-19 World Cup prodigies: RCB struck gold at the mini-auction by picking up stars like Kanishk Chouhan and I hate Malhotra. These youngsters, coming fresh off a successful U-19 campaign, offer the X-factor that often wins games from nowhere. Chouhan, in particular, is a versatile all-rounder who could be the breakout star of 2026.
  • The impact player tactical edge: With a squad full of versatile all-rounders like Iyer and Krunal PandyaRCB is better positioned than most to exploit the Impact Player rule, allowing them to switch between a batting-heavy or bowling-heavy XI based on the toss.

Threats:

  • The weight of expectation: Being the hunted is harder than being the hunter. Every team will have a specific blueprint RCB strategy this year. Managing the psychological shift from being the team trying to win to the team expected to win will be Patidar’s biggest test.
  • Chinnaswamy’s volatility: While it is their home, the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium remains a graveyard for bowlers. One or two bad nights at home can quickly derail momentum in a league where the margin between the top four and the bottom four is razor-thin.