'We thought 140 might be a good total to sort of get into the game on that kind of wicket.'
Royal Challengers Bangalore skipper Virat Kohli blamed his side’s five-wicket defeat to Sunrisers Hyderabad, in Sharjah on Saturday, on poor batting.
The defeat has virtually made their last game against Delhi Capitals a must-win for a top-two finish in the standings.
The Royal Challengers could only put up 120 for 7 after David Warner’s men asked them to take first strike.
"It was never enough. We thought 140 might be a good total to sort of get into the game on that kind of wicket. We weren't brave enough with the bat throughout the innings, and credit to them… they used the pitch well and the change of pace," Kohli said after the match.
"It is a competitive tournament and you can't take any games lightly or any teams for granted. The situation is in front of us - we have to win our last game to hopefully finish in the top two.
"It is going to be a cracker of a game with both teams locked at 14 points. I have always been a Bangalore boy in the IPL; never sort of drifted towards Delhi," Kohli said about RCB's last league game against Delhi Capitals on November 2 in Abu Dhabi.
The SunRisers first produced a brilliant bowling effort to restrict a batting-heavy RCB to a modest 120 for seven and then chased down the target in 14.1 overs to zoom to fourth in the standings.
They now have 12 points from 13 games and need to win their last league game against table-toppers Mumbai Indians to stay in the hunt.
Royal Challengers Bangalore, who needed a win to seal a play-offs berth, slumped to their third consecutive defeat in the tournament but stayed in second place in the table with 14 points from 13 games.
Kohli said dew played an important role in the second innings.
"Things changed drastically in the second innings. There was a lot of dew which we didn't quite predict. They got it right at the toss eventually. In the end it was very difficult to hold the ball.
"Strange one. In between we thought the weather has become pleasant and there wasn't any dew, but last few games in Dubai and here as well there has been dew. The pattern keeps changing but regardless (of that) you need to have runs on the board."
SunRisers captain Warner said their goal was clear coming into this match: win the last two games and progress into the play-offs.
"We knew we had to beat the top two teams in order to progress. We got one more to go against Mumbai. Losing Vijay (Shankar) is a big miss. For us we have worked out how to go about at the top of the order.
"With the bowling, all the credit goes to them. We are finding the right balance and the right partnerships. To go for less than 20 in 4 overs, it's ridiculous," he said.
"We knew we had to win today, and that's the case in the next game. In 2016 we had to win three games and we did that."
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