Jacob Bethell was dismissed for 14 on his first appearance of the 2026 Indian Premier League season for Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Friday.
Bethell’s involvement in the tournament had been called into question this week, with England’s Test No 3 unused through RCB’s opening six matches and former captain Sir Alastair Cook urging the youngster to return to Warwickshire to play county cricket instead of “sitting on his a*** at the IPL not doing anything”.
Ex-England batter Kevin Pietersen weighed in on the debate, posting on social media: “Alastair Cook has absolutely NO IDEA what it’s like to be in the IPL… Stay in India, Jacob. I know, even though you’re not playing, you’re learning and will be a way better player.”
Bethell got his first opportunity this season as an ‘impact player’ in their game against Gujarat Titans. Not named in the initial starting XI, he was substituted in to open the batting for RCB’s chase of 206 to win.
The 22-year-old left-hander struck three fours in his 10-ball stay at the crease, which was ended in the third over as he smacked a Mohammed Siraj delivery straight to the fielder at point – much to his frustration.
Legendary RCB and India batter Virat Kohli stepped up to ultimately lead his side to victory, despite being dropped first ball and the early Bethell blow, as he struck a commanding 81 off 44 balls.
Kohli shared in a decisive stand with Devdutt Padikkal (55 off 27) for the second wicket as the defending champions clinched a fifth win in seven, with seven balls to spare, to move second in the table.
Earlier, Gujarat opener Sudharsan struck a sublime century – 100 off 58 balls – in the Titans’ total of 205-3, but his effort ultimately proved in vain.
England’s Jos Buttler scored 25 off 16, batting at No 3 for Gujarat.
‘The right thing for me right now’ – Bethell responds to IPL stint criticism
Despite his stint on the sidelines prior to Friday’s match, Bethell, who is earning around £250,000 from RCB, defended being at the IPL rather than with Warwickshire.
“I firmly believe that this is the thing for me to be doing right now,” Bethell told the Sky Cricket podcast earlier this week.
“I feel better now than I was a month ago after the World Cup, just from getting time around the guys over here and the pure standard of cricket in India and the IPL.
“It’s something that not many people will understand how cool it is until actually being around a team or the tournament itself when you’re here.
“It just has a completely different feel. It feels like everyone almost ups their game subconsciously without even really knowing because of the calibre of the tournament.”
Bethell added: “You might not get the amount of time in the middle as [you do] in County Championship playing four rounds of that. But I think in terms of the ability to actually just continue doing what you want to do when there are loads of eyes on you, it’s really important for me personally going forward.
“Also, it’s been scheduled in now where we’ve had practice matches when we’re not playing. I know that’s not going to be the same as an actual competitive game, but we’re getting time out in the middle from that because it feels like the whole squad’s pulling together to try.”

