IPL 2026: Pressure of Captaincy Taking Toll on Hardik, Pant, Axar and Parag?
Captaincy in the IPL has never been limited to tactical calls or field placements. In a tournament where momentum changes overnight and scrutiny follows every defeat, captains inevitably become the face of both success and failure. IPL 2026 has perhaps highlighted that reality more brutally than ever before.
Several teams entered the season with fresh leadership stories and renewed ambitions. But with the tournament entering its decisive phase, the pressure is mounting rapidly on captains whose own performances have failed to match expectations while their teams continue slipping down the points table.

From Axar Patel and Rishabh Pant to Hardik Pandya and Riyan Parag, IPL Season 19 is increasingly becoming a test of leadership temperament as much as cricketing ability.
Axar Patel Carrying the Burden of Delhi's Collapse
When Delhi Capitals began the season with two commanding wins and then pushed Gujarat Titans to a thrilling one-run win at home, there was a genuine sense that the franchise had finally found stability under Axar Patel. Their victory against defending champions RCB at the Chinnaswamy Stadium further strengthened that belief.
But what followed was a complete unraveling of momentum. Three consecutive defeats dragged Delhi into trouble before a brief recovery against Rajasthan Royals offered temporary hope. Another defeat against Chennai Super Kings at home, however, has left the Capitals languishing in seventh position with only four wins in ten matches. Their playoff hopes now depend on winning all remaining games.
Naturally, the pressure on captain Axar Patel has intensified significantly, whose body language after defeat in their last outing said it all.
Perhaps the inability of their captain to influence matches personally is also taking a toll on Delhi's results. Axar has picked up only nine wickets in ten games while contributing a mere 33 runs with the bat. For a player expected to provide balance in both departments, those numbers have been underwhelming.
What has perhaps hurt him more is the growing criticism around his decision-making during crucial moments in games. Bowling changes, field settings, and inability to arrest momentum swings have repeatedly come under scrutiny. At times, Axar has appeared like a captain carrying the weight of the season rather than controlling it.
Rishabh Pant and LSG's Painful Downfall
If Delhi's campaign has disappointed, Lucknow Super Giants have endured something far worse. LSG currently sit at the bottom of the table with just two wins in nine matches, and much of the attention has inevitably shifted towards their captain Rishabh Pant.
The season began poorly with defeat against Delhi Capitals, but consecutive wins briefly suggested that Lucknow had recovered. Since defeating Kolkata Knight Riders on April 9, however, the franchise has completely collapsed with six successive losses.
Pant's own struggles have mirrored the team's downfall. The left-hander has managed only 204 runs in nine matches, with 68 being his highest score. But beyond the statistics, what stands out is how subdued Pant has looked throughout the campaign. The naturally aggressive and instinctive batter who once changed games fearlessly now seems burdened by pressure and responsibility.
His captaincy has reflected that frustration as well. The energy and spontaneity that once made Pant an exciting leader now appear replaced by uncertainty. Whether it is team combinations, bowling rotations, or reactions during tense phases, Pant has often looked like a captain searching for answers rather than dictating the contest.
With LSG almost out of playoff contention, the pressure surrounding one of India's biggest cricketing stars is becoming increasingly intense.
Hardik Pandya Facing Another Difficult Season
Few captains entered IPL 2026 with expectations as high as Hardik Pandya. After lifting the T20 World Cup 2026 for Team India and guiding Mumbai Indians back into the playoffs last season following a difficult transition period, Hardik was expected to oversee a full-scale revival for the five-time champions. Mumbai even broke their long-standing habit of losing the opening game of the season by defeating Kolkata Knight Riders, creating optimism around the campaign.
But consistency once again abandoned them. Four consecutive defeats followed before a dominant 99-run win against Gujarat Titans briefly revived their season. That momentum disappeared quickly with three more losses. Even their stunning chase of 228 against Lucknow Super Giants has not significantly improved their position, with Mumbai still sitting ninth on the table with only three wins from ten matches.
And once again, Hardik's own performances have become part of the conversation.
The all-rounder has scored only 146 runs in eight matches at a strike rate of 136.45, which is below his career IPL strike rate. Compared to the aggressive standards he set over the previous two seasons, this campaign has looked unusually subdued. His bowling returns have been equally disappointing with just four wickets in eight games.
For perhaps the first time since 2021, Hardik risks finishing an IPL season without even crossing 200 runs, especially after already missing matches this year.
While several experts believe Mumbai's issues extend beyond captaincy, criticism surrounding Hardik continues to grow louder. Questions have emerged about his inability to inspire performances consistently, while speculation regarding dressing-room dynamics and possible disconnect with senior players has only added to the noise surrounding the franchise.
What makes Hardik's situation particularly difficult is that expectations around him are never limited to captaincy alone. He is expected to lead tactically, finish games with the bat, contribute crucial overs, and control the dressing-room atmosphere simultaneously.
This season, he has struggled to manage all of those responsibilities together.
Riyan Parag Learning the Brutality of IPL Leadership
Rajasthan Royals handing captaincy responsibilities to Riyan Parag was seen as one of the boldest decisions of IPL 2026. Initially, the move looked inspired.
Rajasthan began the campaign with four consecutive wins and appeared among the strongest teams in the competition. But the consistency soon disappeared. In the next six matches, RR could manage only two victories, leaving questions around whether the early momentum had masked deeper issues within the side.
Even though Rajasthan still occupy fourth position, the pressure on Parag has steadily increased. His own batting returns have not helped ease that pressure either. Parag has scored 207 runs in ten matches at a strike rate of 143.75. While those numbers are respectable, they have not consistently translated into match-defining innings.
His best knock of the season, a superb 90 against Delhi Capitals, ultimately came in defeat as Delhi comfortably chased 225. In many ways, that innings perfectly reflected Rajasthan's season under Parag - flashes of brilliance without enough control over results.
Off the field, matters became even more uncomfortable after the young captain was fined 25 percent of his match fees following the vaping controversy inside the Rajasthan Royals dressing room.
For a young cricketer still adapting to leadership responsibilities under constant scrutiny, the additional off-field attention has only intensified the pressure.
At times this season, Parag has looked like a player trying to balance expectations, leadership, personal form, and public perception all at once.
Captaincy in IPL Offers No Breathing Space
The IPL has always been ruthless towards captains because the league amplifies every weakness instantly.
A poor tactical decision becomes a talking point within minutes. A captain out of form immediately faces questions over leadership. Consecutive defeats quickly create doubts around dressing-room control and team culture.
That is exactly the situation Axar Patel, Rishabh Pant, Hardik Pandya, and Riyan Parag now find themselves in.
Each captain entered IPL 2026 with different expectations and circumstances. But all four are confronting the same reality - in the IPL, team struggles and personal failures inevitably merge together.
And once results start slipping away, the pressure rarely stays limited to just the points table.


Click it and Unblock the Notifications