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Spotlight on skippers as IPL reaches feverish pitch

In cricket’s shortest format, where games swing in overs and not sessions, leadership is no longer about presence, it is about precision

News Arena Network - Mumbai - UPDATED: April 27, 2026, 07:20 PM - 2 min read

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Gujarat Titans skipper Shubman Gill and (Right) Punjab Kings captain Shreyas Iyer.


There comes a stage in every IPL when captaincy stops being a subplot and becomes the central narrative. IPL 2026 has reached that point. In a format where games swing in overs, not sessions, leadership is no longer about presence, it is about precision. And right now, the gap between the best and the rest is impossible to ignore.

 

At the heart of the season stands Shreyas Iyer. Punjab Kings’ rise has not been accidental. It has been structured, deliberate and led with clarity. Iyer’s captaincy has drawn consistent praise, not just for results, but for the control he exerts over games.

 

Punjab Kings coach Sanjay Bangar’s staff have repeatedly highlighted the clarity within the group. “We are very clear in how we want to approach each game,” a team insider noted, underlining the structured planning under Iyer. Teammates have gone a step further. “He backs players regardless of form, that’s very important,” said Vyshak Vijaykumar, pointing to the trust Iyer has built within the side.

 

Even beyond the IPL ecosystem, Iyer’s leadership has been recognised as “mature” and “poised under pressure”, strengthening his credentials as a future national leader. That composure is what separates him. “Captaincy in T20 isn’t about reacting, it’s about staying ahead,” as former Australian skipper Richie Benaud once put it.

 

Not far behind, Rajat Patidar has injected boldness into Royal Challengers Bengaluru. His leadership has been instinctive, often aggressive, and refreshingly uncomplicated. Meanwhile, Shubman Gill continues to evolve at Gujarat Titans, balancing responsibility with restraint. “A captain must separate batting and leadership,” Gill himself has said, an insight that reflects his measured approach.

 

Also read: Rajasthan Royals need to brace up for unbeaten Punjab Kings

 

But IPL seasons are as much about exposure as they are about excellence.  At Mumbai Indians, Hardik Pandya remains under the harshest spotlight. Tactical calls have been questioned, but more tellingly, the side has looked unsure of its identity.

 

Lucknow Super Giants, under Rishabh Pant, have drifted through games without authority. The scrutiny is no longer subtle… calls for leadership change have already begun to surface amid inconsistent results. Former India batter KL Rahul once summed up the hidden burden of IPL captaincy: “You’re mentally and physically drained… more than international cricket,” he admitted, highlighting the relentless demands of the role.

 

And that strain is often where captains are exposed. At Kolkata Knight Riders, Ajinkya Rahane has retained composure, but in a format that punishes passivity, calm without adaptability has not been enough. Because, as MS Dhoni famously said, “A captain is only as good as his team.”

 

IPL 2026, however, has added a sharper layer to that truth. The best captains are not just managing teams, they are shaping them in real time. They anticipate, not react. They define moments rather than survive them. And as the tournament moves into its decisive stretch, one thing is clear. In the IPL, talent may win matches—but leadership decides how far you go.

 

By Joe Williams

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