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IPL 2026: How Injuries Derailed CSK and KKR While RCB Marched to the Title

Every IPL season produces its defining narratives. IPL 2026 will be remembered for Royal Challengers Bengaluru's successful title defence, Virat Kohli's remarkable reinvention, Rajat Patidar's emergence as a championship-winning captain and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's extraordinary rise from teenage prodigy to one of the biggest names in the tournament.

Yet beneath those headline stories was another narrative that quietly influenced the season from the opening week until the final in Ahmedabad. Injuries.

IPL 2026 How Injuries Derailed CSK and KKR While RCB Marched to the Title

The IPL is often viewed through the lens of batting explosions, tactical innovations and auction masterstrokes, but a two-month tournament places enormous physical demands on players. A franchise can spend months building a squad around specific combinations only to see those plans unravel when key personnel become unavailable. Some teams are fortunate enough to absorb those setbacks. Others spend the entire season trying to repair the damage.

IPL 2026 offered perhaps the clearest reminder in recent years that availability remains one of the most valuable assets in franchise cricket. While every team faced some level of disruption, no two franchises suffered more than Chennai Super Kings and Kolkata Knight Riders, whose campaigns were repeatedly derailed by injuries to players around whom their plans had been built.

At the other end of the spectrum stood Royal Challengers Bengaluru, Gujarat Titans, Sunrisers Hyderabad and Rajasthan Royals, teams that largely avoided catastrophic losses to their core groups and ultimately reaped the benefits of continuity.

Chennai Super Kings: A Campaign Derailed by Constant Change

For much of their history, Chennai Super Kings have thrived on stability. Whether under MS Dhoni or in the years that followed, CSK's greatest strength was often their ability to settle on a structure early and trust it throughout the season.

That luxury never existed in IPL 2026.

The problems began before the tournament had even started when Nathan Ellis was ruled out for the entire season with a hamstring injury. Ellis had been expected to play a significant role in Chennai's pace attack, particularly during the middle and death overs, and replacing a specialist overseas fast bowler is rarely straightforward. Spencer Johnson arrived as cover, but the change immediately forced CSK to rethink their bowling plans.

The disruptions continued as Matthew Short suffered a fractured thumb that sidelined him during the crucial opening phase of the tournament. Losing a versatile batter capable of filling multiple roles reduced Chennai's flexibility and forced further adjustments to the batting order.

Perhaps the most painful setback came in the form of Ayush Mhatre's injury. The young opener had emerged as one of the discoveries of the season, bringing freshness and attacking intent to a batting line-up searching for momentum. Just as he appeared to be establishing himself, a hamstring tear ended his campaign after only six matches.

The problems did not stop there. Jamie Overton suffered a right thigh injury late in the tournament and returned to England for further treatment, while Khaleel Ahmed battled a quadriceps issue that further weakened Chennai's pace resources during the business end of the season. Ramakrishna Ghosh was also ruled out and eventually replaced by Macneil Noronha.

Individually, none of these injuries may have appeared catastrophic. Together, however, they created a cycle of disruption that Chennai never escaped. Every time the franchise appeared close to settling on a preferred combination, another injury forced a rethink.

Instead of spending the second half of the tournament refining strategies and improving execution, CSK spent much of the season searching for replacements and rebuilding balance. That constant churn prevented them from establishing the continuity that has traditionally been one of the hallmarks of their success.

Kolkata Knight Riders: When the Blueprint Falls Apart

If Chennai's season was a story of repeated interruptions, Kolkata Knight Riders suffered a more fundamental problem. Their carefully constructed bowling blueprint was effectively dismantled before the tournament had properly begun.

The biggest setback was the loss of Harshit Rana. The Indian fast bowler had become a vital part of Kolkata's attack, providing balance and reliability alongside their overseas resources. After suffering a knee injury ahead of the T20 World Cup and undergoing surgery in February, Rana was unable to recover in time for IPL 2026.

His absence immediately removed one of KKR's most important bowling pillars.

The situation became even worse when Matheesha Pathirana's fitness concerns escalated. The Sri Lankan speedster entered the season already recovering from a calf strain and was expected to return later in the campaign. Instead, a subsequent hamstring injury ruled him out for the remainder of the tournament.

Within weeks, Kolkata had lost two of the bowlers around whom much of their pace strategy had been designed.

The setbacks extended beyond the bowling department. Angkrish Raghuvanshi suffered a tournament-ending injury that disrupted the team's batting combinations and removed one of their most promising young players from the equation.

Then there was Varun Chakravarthy, whose season became a symbol of KKR's determination and desperation. Although he remained available throughout the campaign, the mystery spinner played through a finger fracture sustained earlier in the year and later suffered a fractured toe after being struck by a fierce drive against Delhi Capitals.

While his commitment was admirable, it also highlighted how stretched Kolkata's resources had become. The franchise simply could not afford to lose another key player.

The cumulative impact of these setbacks was evident in KKR's start to the season. They took more than 20 days to register their first victory, leaving themselves with a mountain to climb. Although they produced an impressive second-half resurgence, they spent too much of the tournament recovering from damage that had already been done.

Injuries Across the Rest of the League

While Chennai and Kolkata suffered the most severe structural damage, they were far from alone in dealing with fitness concerns.

Rajasthan Royals lost Sam Curran to a season-ending groin injury despite investing heavily in the English all-rounder. Dasun Shanaka arrived as his replacement. Despite those setbacks, Rajasthan's core remained largely intact, allowing them to build around Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's remarkable season and eventually reach Qualifier 2.

Sunrisers Hyderabad began the campaign without captain Pat Cummins, who was still recovering from an injury sustained before the T20 World Cup. Ishan Kishan stepped in as interim captain during the opening phase, while Jack Edwards was ruled out before making his debut due to a foot injury. Eshan Malinga also battled shoulder issues during the season. However, Hyderabad benefited from the fact that their most important players were available when the playoff race intensified.

Mumbai Indians faced a different challenge. Young all-rounder Atharva Ankolekar suffered a meniscus tear that ruled him out for the season, while Rohit Sharma battled a hamstring issue. Yet Mumbai's struggles often appeared less connected to injuries and more related to the cumulative workload carried by an ageing core. Their season raised important questions about burnout, recovery and the physical demands placed on senior players who have spent years playing across formats and leagues.

Even eventual champions RCB were not entirely spared. Josh Hazlewood missed the opening phase of the tournament while completing a lengthy rehabilitation programme. Delhi Capitals faced a similar situation with Mitchell Starc, whose return was delayed by Cricket Australia's workload management protocols. The difference, however, was that both franchises knew those players were expected back and could plan accordingly.

Why the Teams That Stayed Intact Thrived

The most revealing trend of IPL 2026 emerged once the playoff race reached its conclusion. Royal Challengers Bengaluru, Gujarat Titans, Sunrisers Hyderabad and Rajasthan Royals all enjoyed something that several rivals lacked: continuity.

RCB were eventually able to field the core that carried them to back-to-back titles. Gujarat Titans enjoyed another season in which Shubman Gill, Sai Sudharsan and Jos Buttler remained available for most of the campaign. Sunrisers regained stability once Cummins returned, while Rajasthan were able to build around Sooryavanshi's emergence without losing multiple pillars of their first-choice XI.

The contrast with CSK and KKR was impossible to ignore. While the eventual playoff contenders spent most of the season refining roles, strengthening partnerships and improving execution, Chennai and Kolkata were repeatedly forced into reactive changes.

One group spent its energy evolving. The other spent it rebuilding.

The Hidden Story of IPL 2026

Talent remains the most important currency in franchise cricket, and no amount of injury luck can transform a mediocre team into champions. Yet IPL 2026 served as a powerful reminder that availability is one of the sport's most underrated competitive advantages.

The teams that advanced deepest into the tournament were not necessarily those that avoided every injury. Rather, they were the teams that avoided losing the pillars around which their seasons had been built.

For Chennai Super Kings and Kolkata Knight Riders, those pillars disappeared too frequently and too early. By the time both teams began to regain some stability, the season had largely slipped away.

In a tournament decided by fine margins, IPL 2026 demonstrated a simple truth: staying on the field can be just as valuable as what a player does once he gets there.

Story first published: Tuesday, June 2, 2026, 15:09 [IST]
Other articles published on Jun 2, 2026
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