Batting-heavy Sunrisers Hyderabad hopes to bowl rivals over

Kishan in a conversation with head coach Vettori.
| Photo Credit: Sunrisers Hyderabad
Sunrisers Hyderabad enters IPL 2026 with a familiar identity and one built on enviable batting firepower.
On paper, it once again boasts the league’s most formidable batting line-up that is capable of outscoring any opponent. Yet, some questions linger. Will this batting might be enough to carry it all the way? Can a largely inexperienced bowling unit, sans Pat Cummins for the opening matches, hold its own against IPL’s big hitters? Focusing on its forte makes sense, but is it wise to be over-dependent on it?

To be fair to the team, Sunrisers’ approach is not without logic. When your core features Abhishek Sharma and Ishan Kishan, two of the world’s best T20 batters, you are naturally inclined to double down on that.
Add to it the explosiveness of Travis Head, Heinrich Klaasen and Nitish Kumar, the blueprint becomes clear — overwhelm, outscore and outlast the rivals.
There is depth, too. Aniket Verma showed encouraging signs last year, while Liam Livingstone remains a high-upside gamble. R. Smaran arrives in great form, having topped the Ranji Trophy batting chart with 950 runs during Karnataka’s resurgent campaign.
If the batting inspires confidence, the bowling raises concerns.
The overseas contingent is unsettled — Cummins is sidelined, Eshan Malinga awaits fitness clearance, and Kamindu Mendis is just returning from a shoulder injury that ruled him out of the recent T20 World Cup.
Historically, Sunrisers’ most successful campaigns have been anchored by seasoned leaders (like Bhuvneshwar Kumar and T. Natarajan) in the attack. Now, Harshal Patel and Jaydev Unadkat will have to shoulder that responsibility.
At the auction, the Hyderabad outfit, despite having the third-largest purse, turned to a mix of domestic seamers and promising prospects. Among the lesser-known names, young left-arm spinners Krains Fuletra and Shivang Kumar stand out. Whether they are entrusted with meaningful tasks remains to be seen.
The home conditions, at least, offer some comfort. The Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium has traditionally produced flat, batting-friendly pitches, which the Hyderabad team used effectively in 2024 to win five of its seven home games en route a runner-up finish. Ultimately, Sunrisers’ season may hinge on a simple yet decisive balance. Its batting will win it games, perhaps many. If the bowling unit can rise from a point of vulnerability to one of reliability, this could be a complete side. If not, it risks a familiar story: spectacular but short.
Published – March 23, 2026 12:11 am IST