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Orange Cap in TGT20, stint with RR, and the SMAT over that changed everything – inside Aman Rao’s rise

New Delhi, June 27 (IANS) In October 2025, Aman Rao was feeling stuck. A string of failures in the U23 Col CK Nayudu Trophy came after a promising start, and the young right-handed opener found himself searching for answers beyond his own dressing room.

Cut to the present, and those times of struggle in October 2025 look as if they happened a long while back. Rao sits atop the Orange Cap standings in the Telangana T20 League (TGT20) with 192 runs in three innings, including striking the tournament’s first century in only 32 balls, en route to smashing 142 off 48 deliveries for Warangal Warriors.

It is that kind of innings that had the audience at the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium feeling enthralled. That 142, remarkably, came in a losing cause, with Warangal Warriors going down in a thriller despite posting 258, as Tilak Varma’s unbeaten 136 took Medak Falcons over the line.

Rao barely had time to dwell on that astonishing innings coming off his willow before turning his attention to the Warriors’ next match happening on Sunday. “While I was playing, it was just like a flow state. I don’t know what was happening. So, I was just reacting to the ball and playing it.

“Then, after it was done, I took some time to process what I had done that day, and then I had to play a match the day after. So, I had to leave that behind, also at the same time. So, I mean, it was a good feeling, but we lost, so not so great,” he said in an exclusive conversation with IANS on Saturday.

As Aman explained, his approach at the crease is built around clarity rather than recklessness. He looks to target deliveries in his strong zones and back himself to clear the ropes, a method that has fuelled his run of boundary-heavy scores this season, including a knock of 46 where every run came off boundaries only.

But there’s an innate sense of honesty when Rao speaks about where that intent occasionally overstepped its mark. He recalls straying into playing deliveries that were not really there to be hit, a lapse he intends to correct by sticking strictly to the balls within his zone going forward.

Despite leading the Orange Cap race, Rao insisted the individual landmark is secondary to the team’s ambitions. “Yes, the Orange Cap is a good feeling, but I feel that if we win the tournament, it will be a cherry on top. So, I just don’t think about it much, like I am on top of the Orange Cap or something.

“I just try to do what’s best on that day, and hopefully, the results will come by, and the Orange Cap is a part of the process. Like, if we win, if I score, things will keep coming. So, that’s not something I think about that much. I just think about how to perform on that day rather than try to sit on top of the leaderboard of the Orange Cap.”

It is a philosophy, he says, that keeps him grounded through a campaign that has otherwise thrust him into the spotlight. Long before TGT20, Rao had already announced himself on the bigger stage with an unbeaten 200 off 154 balls in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, against a Bengal attack featuring Mohammed Shami, Akash Deep, and Mukesh Kumar.

“Honestly, I didn’t know I was close to 200. I was just playing and didn’t know the score till the last ball. I think they shouted from outside that I needed six runs. Then I was like, ‘I am just hitting till then and might as well hit one more.’ That was in my mind, and I wasn’t thinking 200 – I was thinking last ball, have to capitalise and hit a six.

“So, that was going on through my mind. I would say I got a bit lucky in the last over, when CV Milind’s catch got dropped, and I got to go on strike for those 14 runs. If that catch had been taken, maybe that 200 wouldn’t have happened. So, that’s something I think about to this day. Like, what if that catch was taken, and then maybe I wouldn’t have hit 200.

“That’s what it’s like – some things just happen. That was sort of a day, it just happened, and I would say it took me some time to process that I hit that 200 because when I went into the game, I wasn’t thinking I’m going to score a 200. I was just thinking I was going to play 50 overs and see what happens. I think that’s like the first time I ever played all 50 overs. So, the main ultimate goal that day was to play 50 overs, and I achieved that goal, and the 200 was a by-product, I would say.”

If that double hundred built his reputation, it was a Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy takedown of Shardul Thakur – three fours and two sixes in a single over – that went viral and directly led to Rao’s entry into the IPL 2026 season for Rajasthan Royals.

“I feel for me, at least personally, that knock was a turning point in my career to get into IPL, and then after getting into IPL, the double hundred happened, and then this TGT20. So, that thing I keep remembering almost every day – like because of that one over, I think I got selected, and then now I’m here and very grateful for that.”

In the TGT20 fixture between Warriors and Falcons, Rao admits to being stunned watching India T20I vice-captain Tilak Varma single-handedly complete a chase of 260. Such was its effect that a shell-shocked Rao could only say ‘well played, incredible knock’ to Varma.

“Maybe that’s the reason he’s playing for India. He finishes games like this – even in the Asia Cup final – that knock also against Pakistan in the final, he’s the only one who took on the whole chase that time. That’s what I would say is the difference between an Indian player and a domestic player, and an upcoming player.

“Like I had the opportunity to do that yesterday, and I should have done it, and I couldn’t. So, that’s a learning for me – that I have to become better and try to chase scores like that and take that pressure which Tilak felt on that 260 day. I don’t think he took any risk.

“He was just hitting the balls that were there, and what I felt about myself yesterday was that I was trying to hit every ball. Maybe I could have slowed it down a bit and maybe picked my balls, and then maybe I would have won the game yesterday because it was very chaseable, I felt. So, that’s a big learning, and I have a long career ahead, hopefully, and I will try to do those things in the future.”

Ironically, it was Varma’s guidance during Rao’s struggles in October 2025, when the former was in Australia for the T20I series, that helped him overcome the lean patch. “I was just struggling a lot. So, I just wanted another perspective because I had my coach, obviously, but still I wanted another perspective, like how people get through that part where they’re struggling and what they do.

“So, I just had a chat with him, and he told me to just stick to the basics, don’t try too much. Maybe you’re putting too much pressure on yourself and then trying too much and not enjoying yourself. So, it’s like maybe enjoy yourself more and then try to stick to basics and don’t think too much about the result. So, that’s what he told me.”

During his time with Rajasthan Royals in IPL 2026, Rao spoke warmly of the reassurance he received from head coach & director of cricket Kumar Sangakkara, assistant coach Vikram Rathour, and performance coach Sid Lahiri, who repeatedly told him he wasn’t in the squad merely to make up the numbers, even when game situations meant he didn’t get a chance to play.

“That gave me a lot of confidence that I’m not here just because they had to fill up the squad, and I’m here for a reason. I learned a lot of things in batting, also. I improved a lot skill-wise, mindset-wise, and in how people approach in T20 opening or in the middle order.

Being at RR also led Rao to an unexpected discovery – that he could bat in the middle order. “In the practice game, I scored around 40 off 20 balls. So, that’s when they told me that I can play in the middle order as well. That’s when I realised maybe I have another side of me, and I started practicing for it in the nets as well.

“They were making me practice batting in the middle overs in the practice, and I tried and learned new shots. That’s how I improved as a player as well, and that helped me. Those shots have helped me now in TG20 to make my batting better. I felt easier after playing over there in the practice sessions and against all those bowlers.”

For now, though, a middle-order role with Warangal Warriors remains conditional – both his head coach, Bavanaka Sandeep, and Rao agree it is something to explore only once the team has secured a top-four finish.

In the league’s first-ever season, Rao was effusive in its praise. “The amount of reach it has -the social media work and then crowd coming to the matches, it literally feels like an IPL match.

It’s a really good platform, and in the next one to two years, it’s going to be the biggest league in India. That’s what I feel, and hopefully, that happens, and it continues for as many years as it can. This is a great platform for youngsters like me, even the upcoming youngsters from the under-19, because all the IPL scouts will be watching.

“This is a great platform and not even IPL scouts, the whole of India will be watching, and I feel it’s huge and bigger than the other leagues, and I think in the first season only, we have a lot of audience and everything, and in the upcoming season, it’s going to become bigger. So, it’s a really good platform for all of us Hyderabad players.”

Reflecting on life since October 2025, which has been onwards and upwards for Rao after the lean time, he circled back to a detail that could have kept him out of the season altogether: his Indian passport, after surrendering the USA one, arrived only two days before the domestic season began. Had it been delayed further, Rao concedes, none of the runs, records, and recognition would have come.

“If the passport (arrival) had been delayed, I wouldn’t be here right now. So, I don’t know. I just have no words for it, like how it happened – it just happened. So, no words for it and exactly, leaves you speechless.” For a player like Rao who’s still figuring out which parts of his game to trust and which to rein in, growth has come fast, and it is, by his own admission, a great deal to process.

–IANS

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