As the IPL 2026 season gears up, death overs (16-20) remain the most high-stakes phase where matches are won or lost. Pace bowlers who master yorkers, variations, and economy under pressure will be game-changers.
Here are five standout death-over pacers to keep an eye on, each bringing proven skill, recent domestic form, and team-specific impact after the 2025-26 auction.

Jasprit Bumrah continues to be the gold standard for death-over bowling in T20 cricket. Retained as Mumbai Indians' premier pacer, the right-arm express has bowled over 550 balls in IPL death overs across his career while conceding just 531 runs at an economy of approximately 5.75. His laser-guided yorkers, deceptive slower balls, and ability to bowl in any phase make him nearly impossible to attack. In MI's star-studded attack alongside Trent Boult, Bumrah's presence ensures tight finishes and will once again terrorise batters in 2026.
Punjab Kings' left-arm swing specialist Arshdeep Singh has carved a reputation as one of the most reliable death-over operators since 2022. He posted an economy of just 5.66 in IPL death overs that season and maintains a stellar T20I death-over economy around 6.7 with pinpoint yorkers and clever variations. Retained by PBKS, where he anchors the pace unit alongside overseas options like Lockie Ferguson, Arshdeep's ability to swing the new ball early and restrict in the death makes him indispensable for defending totals or chasing in crunch situations this season.
Rajasthan Royals' experienced campaigner Sandeep Sharma brings control and guile to death overs with his swing and signature off-cutters. Tasked with both powerplay and death duties in recent IPL stints, the right-arm seamer has used his variations effectively to break partnerships and keep economy rates in check. Retained by RR alongside Jofra Archer and Tushar Deshpande, Sandeep's vast experience (over 100 IPL wickets) and composure under pressure position him as a steady anchor in Rajasthan's bowling attack, especially in tight chases during IPL 2026.
Chennai Super Kings' Australian import Nathan Ellis is a proven death-over maestro, famous for his knuckleball and clever variations that earned him exceptional records in the Big Bash League and earlier IPL spells. After four seasons with Punjab Kings, he was snapped up by CSK (retained ahead of 2026) and boasts standout figures like 4/30 in past seasons. Ellis can operate across phases but thrives at the death, restricting big hitters while picking wickets. Alongside Mukesh Choudhary and Khaleel Ahmed in CSK's varied attack, he is set to be a game-changer in high-pressure finishes.
Delhi Capitals' high-profile auction buy Auqib Nabi, who was picked for ₹8.4 crore, is the exciting new face in death-over pace bowling. The Jammu & Kashmir right-arm seamer has dramatically improved his death skills, claiming 15 wickets in seven Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy matches at an economy under 8. Backed by recent Ranji Trophy heroics (55 wickets in a season, including match-winning hauls), his swing, seam movement, and wrist-position mastery now extend to the death. In DC's pace-heavy lineup with Mitchell Starc and T Natarajan, Nabi's domestic mastery makes him one to watch as he transitions to the IPL spotlight in 2026.