Why Lucknow Super Giants Collapsed Despite Having One of IPL 2026’s Best Squads
Lucknow Super Giants entered IPL 2026 looking like one of the strongest squads on paper.
A top order featuring Mitchell Marsh, Aiden Markram, Nicholas Pooran and Rishabh Pant, backed by Mohammed Shami and a talented Indian pace attack, made LSG look like genuine title contenders before the season began.
Instead, the campaign collapsed into one of the biggest disappointments of IPL 2026.
LSG became the first team officially eliminated from the playoff race after a crushing defeat to Chennai Super Kings, with tactical confusion, inconsistent selections and underperforming stars ultimately destroying their season.
Here are the biggest names and decisions that contributed to LSG's downfall.
Rishabh Pant: The ₹27 crore problem LSG never solved
Everything around LSG this season ultimately revolved around Rishabh Pant.
The franchise invested a record ₹27 crore in the wicketkeeper-batter and handed him leadership responsibilities, expecting him to become both the face and heartbeat of the team.
Instead, Pant spent most of IPL 2026 searching for rhythm.
The left-hander constantly shifted batting positions - opening in some matches, batting at No. 3 in others and later dropping into the middle order. That instability reflected the larger confusion inside the team setup.
Pant finished with only one fifty across the season and repeatedly struggled to produce the kind of high-impact innings expected from the most expensive player in IPL history.

His captaincy also came under increasing scrutiny as LSG continued making puzzling tactical calls during crunch situations.
Nicholas Pooran: LSG's biggest batting blunder
Nicholas Pooran's usage may have been the clearest example of LSG overcomplicating their own strengths.
Pooran had been devastating at No. 3 previously, yet LSG repeatedly pushed him down the order to No. 4 and even No. 5 despite obvious evidence that he was most dangerous higher up.
The consequences were brutal.
Pooran endured a horrific start to the season, averaging barely above 10 during the early phase of the tournament. Only when he briefly returned to No. 3 did he immediately rediscover form, smashing rapid half-centuries and reminding everyone why he is one of the world's best T20 batters.
By then, however, the damage was already done.
Aiden Markram and Mitchell Marsh never received stability
Mitchell Marsh and Aiden Markram actually gave LSG several strong starts during the season, but the team constantly tinkered around them instead of building continuity.
Markram was shifted away from his successful opening role at different stages, while Marsh often carried too much responsibility as the only consistently functioning top-order batter.
Neither player was disastrous individually.
The larger issue was that LSG never committed fully to a stable batting identity around them.
Tom Moody and Justin Langer fronted a confused setup
LSG's problems were not limited to players.
The management group itself often appeared overcrowded and directionless.
Tom Moody later admitted publicly that the middle-order batting failures defined the season, while Justin Langer repeatedly defended Pant and the team selections throughout the campaign.
But externally, the franchise increasingly looked like a side suffering from "too many cooks" - multiple tactical voices without one clear direction.
That confusion repeatedly showed through selection changes, batting-order reshuffles and inconsistent match strategies.
Mohammed Shami and Prince Yadav lacked support
Ironically, bowling was actually the stronger department for LSG at times.
Mohammed Shami and Prince Yadav formed a surprisingly effective pace combination, consistently providing wickets with the new ball and keeping LSG competitive during several matches.
But outside that pairing, the support system collapsed.
Mohsin Khan missed key matches through injury, Avesh Khan struggled badly for consistency, and Mayank Yadav failed to make the explosive impact many expected after his breakthrough rise.
LSG also badly missed Wanindu Hasaranga's mystery spin and lower-order balance after injuries ruled him out.
Sanjiv Goenka's pressure environment returned to focus
Whenever LSG struggle, scrutiny inevitably shifts toward owner Sanjiv Goenka and the overall environment around the franchise.
Questions again emerged around whether the pressure-heavy culture surrounding the team negatively affects decision-making and player confidence.
The constant visibility of ownership reactions, tactical interventions and public scrutiny created the sense of a franchise constantly operating under tension rather than stability.
The biggest issue: LSG abandoned what worked
Perhaps the strangest part of LSG's collapse was how avoidable much of it seemed.
The team already possessed a successful batting template from previous seasons. Marsh, Markram and Pooran had clearly defined strengths. The bowling attack had enough quality to compete.
Instead of simplifying roles, LSG complicated almost everything.
Batting positions changed constantly. Team combinations shifted repeatedly. Players appeared uncertain about their responsibilities from one match to the next.
By the time LSG finally found glimpses of rhythm late in the season, the playoff race was already over.
And for a team that looked like title contenders on paper, that may be the biggest failure of all.


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