Mayank Agarwal Reveals Emotional Release After RCB's Historic IPL 2025 Victory

Mayank Agarwal experienced an emotional release when RCB finally won their first IPL title after 18 years. He contributed significantly with an unbeaten 41 in the final chase against Lucknow Super Giants. After going unsold initially, Agarwal focused on self-improvement with a strict daily routine. He now aims to help Karnataka win the Ranji Trophy, which they haven't claimed since the 2014-15 season.

Key Points: Mayank Agarwal on RCB's IPL 2025 Win and Emotional Journey

  • Played crucial unbeaten 41 in final chase against Lucknow Super Giants
  • Credits Virat Kohli's tactical advice during high-pressure final moments
  • Adopted disciplined 5 AM routine after going unsold in initial auction
  • Now focused on winning Ranji Trophy with Karnataka after 2014-15 drought
4 min read

You could feel years of emotion release in that moment, says Agarwal on IPL 2025 win

Mayank Agarwal opens up about RCB's maiden IPL title win, his emotional release after 14 years with the franchise, and the mental reset after going unsold initially.

"You could feel years of emotion release in that moment - Mayank Agarwal"

New Delhi, Nov 10

Opener Mayank Agarwal opened up on the emotional arc of his IPL journey, saying that being a part of Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s maiden IPL title win made him release the emotions of all those years of being within and outside the franchise.

Agarwal won IPL 2025 with RCB, after being signed as a late replacement for the injured left-handed batter Devdutt Padikkal. His notable contribution was hitting an unbeaten 23-ball 41 as RCB chased down 228 to beat Lucknow Super Giants and clinch a top two finish in the points table.

"My first year at RCB was 2011; we lost the final in Chennai. Winning now wasn’t just joy, it was closure to 2011. To go from not being part of the IPL to being part of the team that won it for the first time in 18 years, that’s history, and it’s hard to put into words. It was massive not just for the franchise but for the fans, players, and everyone connected to RCB. You could feel years of emotion release in that moment," said Agarwal on RCB Podcast.

Recalling the high-pressure final, Agarwal credited Virat Kohli’s tactical inputs and Phil Salt’s aggressive start for setting the tone. "It was nervy. In the qualifier, Kyle Jamieson had a good over at me, so in the final when he started again, Virat said, ‘He’s getting bounce and shape; look to attack him square of the wicket, not just past third man’.”

“Once the first boundary came, the confidence followed and we put pressure back. Phil Salt’s intent set it up. My role was to keep the momentum. If I could soak up the pressure and turn it back quickly, our partnership would flow, and it did."

Agarwal also spoke about the mental reset after going unsold initially in the auction, where he chose self-reflection over disappointment. "I gave myself 6-8 hours after the auction. Yes, thoughts came; I haven’t got picked, this could have been, that could have been but I was brutally honest with myself: ‘yes, you aren’t picked’.”

“There have to be a few places you need to work on, and if it’s even just a couple of things, why not fix them now for the coming season. Rather than leaning on auction dynamics, I just kept asking, what can I improve right now? I listed points with my batting coach and started immediately."

He also talked in detail about the discipline behind his daily routine, which helped him stay focused and prepared. "I made a routine and followed it to the tee: wake up at 5, train, go to RX sir for skill sessions, finish by mid-afternoon, spend time with family, then give myself half an hour before sleep to plan tomorrow.”

“And then just relentlessly go about doing that, day after day. If I had achieved the plan for the day by 3 or 3:30, I allowed myself to switch off. But the next day’s checklist was already ready the night before."

He further appreciated the clarity and challenge of the trials, especially coming from head coach Andy Flower. "Andy was very straightforward: ‘This is a selection match; make it or break it.’ I loved that. It put me in a spot where I had to perform, exactly like a real game.”

“I did well, the coaches were happy, and they felt, ‘This guy is ready; we don’t need to spend time preparing him for the game.’ Being told to come for open nets and practice games, not straight into the squad, was refreshing. It meant I had to earn it the same way I’d have to in a pressure situation."

Agarwal remains focused on unfinished business with Karnataka in the domestic circuit, with the side yet to win Ranji Trophy after 2014-15 season. "I’ll try to be easier on myself, but honestly, I won’t. Karnataka hasn’t won in a while; we’ve played good cricket but haven’t crossed the line. We’ll do everything we can to win the Ranji Trophy, it would be huge for us and for Karnataka fans."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
His discipline and routine are what impressed me most. Waking up at 5 AM, following a strict schedule - that's the kind of dedication we need in our youth. More players should adopt this professional approach.
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Michael C
As someone who's followed IPL from the beginning, this RCB win feels special. The way Agarwal handled the pressure in the final was clinical. That 41 off 23 balls changed the game completely.
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Shreya B
While I'm happy for RCB, I do feel the coverage is a bit too focused on individual stories. The team effort mattered more - Phil Salt's start, Kohli's guidance, everyone contributed. Let's not make it just about one player.
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Rohit P
The mental strength he showed after going unsold is remarkable. Instead of blaming the system, he worked on himself. That's the attitude we need in Indian cricket! 🇮🇳 Now hoping he can help Karnataka win Ranji too.
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Emma D
What a redemption story! From 2011 final loss to 2025 victory, full circle moment. The emotional release he talks about must have been incredible for all RCB fans who've waited so long. Well deserved win!

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