IPL 2026: Three captains likely to lose leadership roles after disastrous campaigns
LSG are officially eliminated, making Pant the biggest fall guy of back-to-back poor seasons.
PTI
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Axar Patel, Ajinkya Rahane and Rishabh Pant failed to guide their teams into the playoffs in successive seasons (PTI)
New Delhi, 14 May
Three IPL captains are in the line of fire due to campaigns that have been nothing short of disastrous and they could end up losing their jobs when the season winds up later this month, sources tracking developments in various franchises have indicated.
Axar
Patel, Ajinkya Rahane and Rishabh Pant have captained for two successive
seasons and failed miserably in their bid to take their respective teams into
the playoffs.
Only
Lucknow Super Giants are officially eliminated, making Pant the biggest fall
guy of back-to-back poor seasons.
But for
all practical purposes, Kolkata Knight Riders led by Rahane and Delhi Capitals
helmed by Axar are also unlikely to be around during the business end of the
high-profile league.
Axar's
numbers as captain and player make for poor reading. He has scored only 100
runs in nine innings at a strike-rate of 112.50, with 56 coming in one innings
and the remaining 44 aggregated across eight knocks despite batting mostly in
the top-five.
In 12
games, Axar has bowled only 36 overs, exactly three overs per game, and picked
up 10 wickets at an economy rate of 8.08.
While the
economy rate looks respectable considering the punishment endured by fellow
spinner Kuldeep Yadav, Axar has often under-bowled himself.
With Delhi
Capitals having an arrangement of equal owners -- JSW and GMR split management
responsibilities in alternate cycles -- next season will see Parth Jindal and
JSW taking charge of cricket operations.
"With
Axar completely failing to prove his leadership worth and mostly being
dependant on Hemang Badani and Venugopal Rao for decision making, it will be a
miracle if he retains captaincy next year.
"The
entire coaching staff is also unlikely to be retained," an IPL source
tracking developments told PTI on conditions of anonymity.
The
decisions to ignore a flamboyant batter like Abhishek Porel, not using an
all-rounder like Madhav Tiwari consistently, and throwing an out-of-sync
youngster like Sahil Parakh into the deep end expecting him to do a Vaibhav
Suryavanshi have not gone unnoticed.
Parakh
undoubtedly has talent but remains a work in progress.
With mega
auctions slated for 2027, Axar as a player could still be retained but there
has been little evidence of dynamic leadership so far.
As
decision-making powers shift from GMR to JSW, Axar's future as leader certainly
isn't cast in stone.
Not
exactly 'Pant'astic
===============
In Pant's
case, it is an open secret in franchise cricket that captaincy doesn't sit well
with him.
Pant has
tried batting at different positions but it has often seemed that he is
carrying a thousand-ton burden on his shoulders.
In a
franchise ecosystem where instant results are the norm, failing to qualify for
two successive seasons is unlikely to go down well with LSG owner Sanjiv
Goenka.
Within
franchise circles, Goenka is known as someone willing to pay top dollar --
nearly USD three million in Pant's case -- but also someone who demands
performances that can justify with the remuneration.
Pant's 251
runs at a strike-rate of 138 is poor by modern T20 standards.
The
pressure he is under is reflected in the fact that he has hit only nine sixes
in 11 games.
The flow
that once defined his batting seems missing and some of the team composition
decisions have left even staunch LSG supporters perplexed.
Why was
Arshin Kulkarni, whose Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy strike-rate as opener hovers
around 134, pushed to open in the IPL? His 17 off 24 balls as opener in this
day and age beggars belief.
Did Pant
take the call or was it coach Justin Langer and the support staff?
Even
beyond Kulkarni, questions remain over repeated opportunities for Himmat Singh,
whose domestic T20 strike-rate barely crosses the 130-mark.
Similarly,
why was Ayush Badoni repeatedly preferred in the top-half despite not
possessing the muscular power game expected in modern T20 batting?
Certainly,
the poor form of Nicholas Pooran and Aiden Markram hurt the campaign badly but
Pant never looked like a captain possessing the tactical acumen needed for this
format.
Rahane
turns into liability
=================
Rahane's
appointment at KKR was largely a classic TINA (There Is No Alternative) case as
the franchise lacked credible leadership options.
It also
helped that his former Mumbai teammate Abhishek Nayar was at the helm as head
coach.
However,
KKR were hamstrung by the fact that Rahane and Nayar's protege Angkrish
Raghuvanshi could not match the pace demanded from top-order batters in modern
T20 cricket.
Raghuvanshi
scored 340 runs at a strike-rate of 139-plus while skipper Rahane managed 237
runs at a strike-rate of 133. Both batted in the top-three, resulting in loss
of momentum in almost every game.
In 11
matches, the duo combined for only 25 sixes, averaging barely two sixes per
game between them.
Rahane and
Raghuvanshi ideally should not have played together in the same XI and the
management's stubbornness proved costly for the franchise.
When
questioned about his strike-rate earlier this season, Rahane had spoken about
people being jealous but at 37, he perhaps needs to introspect whether he can
still keep pace with the changing demands of T20 cricket.
While Axar
and Pant will continue to remain in demand as players, it can safely be said
that Rahane is unlikely to attract interest from any franchise at the next
mini-auction unless KKR, in a bizarre move, decide to persist with him for one
more season.
That move
could well prove counter-productive.




