
With wheels falling off, Delhi Capitals back in familiar IPL blackhole again
When Delhi Capitals began their IPL 2025 campaign, it felt like they were scripting a season to remember — a narrative built on high hopes, bold performances, and the belief that this could finally be their year. The first four matches? Flawless. Unbeaten. Unbothered. They looked like a team in complete control of their destiny.But the 10-wicket loss to Gujarat Titans at Kotla confirmed that DC's control has slowly slipped away. The tone has shifted. Momentum has disappeared. From title contenders, they've tumbled into a chaotic mid-table scramble, managing just two wins in their last six games — one of them via a Super Over.advertisementThe early confidence has been replaced by a desperate search for answers. Now they have to win their two remaining league stage matches with healthy run rates and hope other results go their way to enter into the top four.At the center of their familiar season collapse, lies a misfiring top order, muddled tactical decisions, and a baffling misuse of personnel.THE FLYING STARTFew teams hit the ground running like Delhi Capitals. Their opening fortnight was as close to perfect as it gets. Four wins in four games. Ashutosh Sharma delivering fireworks at the death. Mitchell Starc proving lethal at the back end of innings. Even though cracks in the batting were visible, the team kept finding ways to win.Those wins weren't built on a solid strategy. They were thrilling, unpredictable, and mostly carried by individual brilliance. There was no tactical blueprint, but there was belief, and most importantly, points on the board. And for a while, that was enough.TOP-ORDER TRIALS AND ERRORS
Jake Fraser-McGurk struggled to perform in IPL 2025. Courtesy: PTI
advertisementAs the season progresses towards the business end, Delhi Capitals' top order has become their biggest liability. Across 10 games, they experimented with seven different opening combinations — the highest of any team this season. Their most productive pairing, Faf du Plessis and Jake Fraser-McGurk, averaged just 30.7 at a strike rate of 131.4 — numbers that simply don't cut it in a league increasingly defined by explosive powerplay starts.Abishek Porel sparked early promise but failed to build on it. His innings against GT, where he flickered briefly before a soft dismissal, summed up his campaign in miniature. Fraser-McGurk arrived with a reputation for aggressive batting but hasn't lived up to it. Faf du Plessis managed a composed fifty against KKR, but his recent returns — 2, 22, 29 and 5— suggest a batter out of sync with his timing.Karun Nair struggled to make an impact worth remembering after the breakout 89-run knock against Mumbai Indians. The entire top order turned into a carousel of uncertainty — no stability, no momentum. There was no one to anchor the innings, no one to accelerate meaningfully. More often than not, it ended with a top-edge to point or a mistimed hoick to deep midwicket.advertisementMeanwhile, Gujarat Titans have showcased exactly what Delhi have lacked. Shubman Gill and Sai Sudharsan have forged the tournament's most consistent opening partnership, stringing together seven 50-plus stands, including a century stand. That kind of reliability and clarity at the top has been missing from DC's campaign all season.AXAR PATEL AND THE CAPTAINCY VOIDAxar Patel has long been admired for his calm demeanour. But in his first season as full-time captain, that very calmness has started to look like a liability. In the IPL, composure alone isn't enough — what you need is intent, bold decisions, and tactical clarity.So far, Axar has struggled to put a clear strategic stamp on this team. Delhi's early wins were more a product of individual brilliance than any evident game plan. As matches have tightened and margins have grown smaller, his hesitation has become more noticeable. Delayed bowling changes, inflexible batting orders, questionable field placements, and a failure to seize key moments have cost DC dearly.advertisementUNDERUSED AND UNDERWHELMED: THE STUBBS CONUNDRUM
Tristan Stubbs has been shuffled across the DC batting lineup. Courtesy: PTI
Tristan Stubbs has been Delhi Capitals' most underused asset - and arguably their biggest misstep this season.Back in IPL 2024, Stubbs was a revelation. He dominated the death overs, piling up 252 runs at a staggering strike rate of 262.5. A consistent, fearless finisher, he was the kind of player most teams would centre their middle order around.But in 2025, he's been pushed to the margins. Shunted down the order to No. 5, 6, even 7 - often walking in too late to make any real impact. In some games, he didn't feature at all. For a batter who was striking at over 168 in the SA20 earlier this year, the lack of opportunity is simply baffling.Nobody can explain why Axar Patel bats at No.4 while Stubbs struggles for gametime. In a team lacking middle-order muscle, Stubbs could've been the solution at No. 3 or 4. Instead, he's been a forgotten figure.SELECTION SHUFFLES AND THE RAHUL-POREL SPLITIt's not just the openers. The revolving door extended to the rest of the batting order. KL Rahul and Porel had put together 324 partnership runs across just seven innings, with four 50+ stands — and yet, not once they have been used as openers by the DC management this season.advertisementMind you, neither batter has looked comfortable as opener, and none of the new combinations have worked. Looking back, the decision is as confusing as it is costly.Faf, brought in as a backup, ended up as a frontline pick. With Harry Brook pulling out, DC could've turned to a dynamic young option like Dewald Brevis — a player with intent and upside. Instead, they leaned on experience, and it hasn't paid off.ONE-MAN ATTACK: THE STARC BURDEN
Mitchell Starc has taken 14 wickets from 10 matches in the IPL. Courtesy: PTI
Mitchell Starc carried Delhi's bowling attack on his shoulders. 14 wickets in 10 matches at an average of 26.14. A five-wicket haul. A three-for against KKR. Every time DC looked threatening with the ball, it was Starc. And now DC don't have the services of Starc for the final leg of the tournament.The rest of the attack has been a letdown.advertisementMukesh Kumar has nine wickets, but leaks runs at nearly 10 an over. Chameera has played only three matches. Mohit Sharma? Two wickets in seven games. Not the returns DC needed.The spin trio of Axar Patel, Kuldeep Yadav, and Vipraj Nigam have vanished in the second half of the tournament. They're leaking runs and picking up nothing.Since the second match against LSG — maybe earlier — it's felt like the bowlers are more focused on damage control than on taking wickets. That mindset shift has cost them.They've tried every possible combination in the powerplay: Axar bowling three overs, sometimes none; no spinners at all; Chameera starting; Starc bowling three overs once, only one over another time; even trying Natarajan early. Nothing has worked. DC keep getting hit. They keep failing to strike early.Axar still holds the best economy among spinners in the powerplay (around 8.5). Mukesh leads amongst pacers — also 8.5. That's the best they've got.Kuldeep Yadav bowled like a man trying to plug a dam with chewing gum. No support. No help. Chameera, Mukesh, and everyone else? A masterclass in mediocrity.And don't even get started on the death overs.MANAGEMENT AT FAULT?Why did DC wait two months to replace Harry Brook — and in the process, miss out on dynamic talents like Dewald Brevis? The replacement could have been signed well before the tournament even began. Instead, they dragged their feet while other teams moved swiftly. CSK snapped up Brevis and Ayush Mhatre, PBKS picked Mitchell Owen, and RR brought in Lhuan-dre Pretorius. Delhi? They waited until DC lost their momentum — and finally brought in Sediqullah Atal, only to not play him at all.And for what? Imagine a finishing duo of Stubbs and Brevis. That could've changed games. But instead, the management clung to Rs 6 crore as if hoarding cash was the goal.No foresight. No structure. Just panic moves and a whole lot of vibes.FIELDING: AN ABSOLUTE DISASTER
Delhi Capitals have struggled with their fielding in IPL 2025. Courtesy: PTI
Fielding? Nothing short of a disaster. Catches were dropped like the ball was laced with poison. Routine stops turned into runs, and overthrows were handed out like freebies at a festival. It wasn't just sloppy — it was demoralising.And the body language told its own story. Heads down, shoulders slumped, energy non-existent. Halfway through most first innings, DC already looked like a team that had mentally checked out.Watching them in the field felt like watching a blooper reel curated by someone with a vendetta — a highlight package of how not to play cricket.Then came the no-balls — momentum-killers of the worst kind. Just when DC built some pressure, someone would overstep, handing the opposition a lifeline and undoing all the hard work in a split second.These weren't isolated mistakes. They were costly, repeated blunders. It's one thing to be outclassed. But Delhi's undoing came from within — a team that couldn't stop tripping over itself, game after game.PLAYOFF SCENARIOS: THE TIGHTROPE WALK
Delhi Capitals are in a tricky position in IPL 2025. Courtesy: PTI
Somehow, Delhi Capitals are still alive in the playoff race — but just barely. The road ahead is as narrow as it gets.They face Mumbai Indians on May 21, followed by Punjab Kings on May 24. Win both, and they'll qualify — the net run rate won't matter.But a loss to Mumbai ends the story. MI would move to 16 points, a total Delhi can no longer reach. If DC beat Mumbai but slip up against Punjab, they'll be left hoping for favorable results elsewhere, with their fate depending on how Mumbai and Lucknow finish.There's no more room for mistakes. One more stumble and a season that began with genuine hope will collapse into yet another all-too-familiar disappointment.Stay updated on IPL 2025 with India Today! Get match schedules, team squads, live score, and the latest IPL points table for CSK, MI, RCB, KKR, SRH, LSG, DC, GT, PBKS, and RR. Plus, keep track of the top contenders for the IPL Orange Cap and Purple Cap. Don't miss a moment!Must Watch
IN THIS STORY#IPL 2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India.com
29 minutes ago
- India.com
Happy To Live With Whatever...: Mitchell Starc Breaks Silence On Skipping IPL 2025 Return After Indo-Pak Conflict
Star Australia pacer Mitchell Starc has opened up on his decision to not return to India for the IPL 2025 resumption following a 10-day break due to cross-border tensions between India and Pakistan. Starc had picked 14 wickets in 11 games for Delhi Capitals in IPL 2025, before the competition was paused on May 8. He was part of the DC playing XI in that match against Punjab Kings in Dharamsala when lights abruptly went off in the stadium and the game was abandoned. While several of his Australian teammates returned to India for the resumption of the IPL 2025 once the ceasefire between India and Pakistan came into effect, Starc didn't come back for the remainder of the tournament and DC failed to enter the playoffs. "I'm comfortable with my decision and how I felt about the whole situation and how it was handled. That's why I made my decision post-that, and my focus changed to red-ball cricket for about a week prior to coming over here. Time will tell with repercussions or how it looks with guys that didn't return," Starc was quoted as saying by The Age. "But I've had my questions and concerns leading into that game, and obviously we saw what happened, which played a part in my decision," he added. Starc said for the same reasons he had decided not to travel to Pakistan for the Champions Trophy 2025 with the Australian team. 'There was a little bit of that to my decision around the Champions Trophy (in Pakistan) and then once the tournament (IPL) was delayed, you start to think about guys' preparation for the Test match,' he said while referring to Australia's World Test Championship final against South Africa, which will be played at Lord's from June 11. As per Starc, things were "handled differently for different players and different teams" in Dharamsala. Notably, both PBKS and DC teams along with the broadcast crew had returned to Delhi from Pathankot in a special train. "Things were handled differently for different players and different teams, the guys up in Dharamsala, the Punjab guys were part of that, and while both teams had similar experiences up there, all those guys returned for Punjab, and Jake (Fraser-McGurk) and I chose not to," said Starc. "It was a very individual decision, and I'm happy to live with whatever comes of that," he added. Australian pacer also noted that not choosing to return back to IPL 2025 was down to extraordinary circumstances. "I'm still heavily committed to the Delhi group, and I'm not someone that's gone into tournaments and pulled out after being picked up in an auction or whatever that looks like. These are different circumstances," Starc said.


NDTV
32 minutes ago
- NDTV
Jasprit Bumrah's Captaincy Snub By BCCI Gets Huge Backing: "You Can't Have A..."
Australia legend Ricky Ponting has thrown his weight behind Shubman Gill as India's new Test captain and outlined how he believes the side could shape up for their upcoming five-Test tour of England — their first without stalwarts Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. Both Kohli and Rohit, two of India's modern greats, announced their retirements from Test cricket earlier this month, prompting a generational shift as India looks to the future. At just 25, Gill has been entrusted with the captaincy — a move that raised eyebrows among some pundits, but not Ponting. 'I actually think it's the right move,' Ponting said on The ICC Review, responding to debate around Gill's appointment. 'I know there's a lot of other people out there, pundits out there saying they can't understand why it wasn't Bumrah and why they have gone to Shubman, but I think it's pretty simple. 'Bumrah's injuries are holding him back a bit in the last couple of years and you don't want that with a captain. You can't have a captain coming in and missing games here and there. So I think it's the right decision. Now that they've made it, it's one they've got to stick with and give him a good crack at it for a long period of time.' Ponting, who has worked with Gill during IPL stints, praised the young batter's temperament and leadership skills, particularly after guiding Gujarat Titans during a turbulent IPL 2025 campaign. 'Even just looking back at the way he's handled this current GT team through this IPL, I think leadership sits really well with him,' Ponting said. 'And the important thing for me with leadership as well is if you're a batter and you're a captain, you have to be scoring runs. And Shubman is doing that in IPL and I think the timing is right. I think you'll have a good captain who'll make a lot of Test runs going forward.' While Gill's leadership qualities are not in question for Ponting, the position he should bat in remains open. Having oscillated between opening and No. 3 in his 32-Test career so far, the former Australia captain suggested that Gill might benefit from batting lower down the order. 'I think (Sai) Sudharsan and (Yashasvi) Jaiswal will open the batting (in England), as Sudharsan just looks like a class player to me and technically I think he could do well at Test level,' Ponting said. 'They'll have two pretty young opening batters, so they might look to go for someone that's got a bit more experience at No.3. Whether that's KL (Rahul) or Karun (Nair) at No.3, and then Shubman might end up being that No.4 player, which will probably make life for him a little bit easier as a captain as well. 'Not having to be opening or batting at No.3 as a young captain might make it easier. Their top five will probably be Sudarshan, Jaiswal, KL, Gill and Karun Nair for the start of the England series.' Replacing legends like Rohit and Kohli in Test cricket is a mammoth task, but Ponting believes India is well-equipped to handle the transition. 'It's always very hard to replace players like that have been around for so long, that have played that much Test cricket. But if any country can do it and do it quickly, India can because of the amount of young talent that they have,' he noted. 'I've seen it first-hand for 10 years now around the IPL and we've seen the emergence of Jaiswal and these sort of guys that have come into international cricket with India and done really well pretty much straight away. The skill side of it's one thing to replace and I think India will replace the skill side of it easily enough, but the experience is the big thing that's going to be missing for them. 'So now even with a young captain with Shubman Gill, they'll still have some experience around with KL Rahul and Bumrah and these sort of guys. But I think if you look at a rebuilding sort of phase, I think India can cope with it better than most other teams.' Ponting also touched on the surprise inclusion of left-arm pacer Arshdeep Singh in India's squad for the England series — a move that many viewed as a gamble. But having worked with the 26-year-old at Punjab Kings in the IPL, Ponting feels Arshdeep's skill set and familiarity with English conditions could be key. 'I would actually have him in their Test team at the start (of the England series),' Ponting said. 'He's very skillful, he's played County cricket, he knows the conditions there and I think the Dukes Ball will help him in the UK as well. And I just think to have that point of difference, having a left-armer in your team, I think will be something that, if India don't do it then it'll be a bit of a surprise to me. 'As we know in England, the ball still swings 30, 40 or 50 overs old. So to have someone that's got that swing bowling ability and a left-armer I think is something that the Indian team should definitely look out for on that tour.' India's tour of England, part of the ICC World Test Championship 2025–27 cycle, begins with the first Test at Headingley, Leeds on June 20. Listen to the latest songs, only on


Hans India
39 minutes ago
- Hans India
Any time I bowl in England I'm reasonably confident, says Hazlewood ahead of WTC Final
New Delhi: Ahead of Australia facing South Africa in the World Test Championship final, fast-bowler Josh Hazlewood said he always feels reasonably confident while bowling in Tests in England and added that he will increase his pace in the run-up to the one-off clash starting at the Lord's on June 11. In 12 Tests in England, Hazlewood has picked 52 wickets at an average of 26.07. The fast bowler took five wickets in his most recent match at the Lord's, which happened during the 2023 Ashes series against England. "Any time I bowl in England, I'm reasonably confident. I've had some good tours here over the last 10 years, and Lord's in particular. I haven't lost before at Lord's yet as a player, certainly in red-ball cricket for sure, and we have had a couple of good wins there over the years." "Today is sort of post-flight and just to get moving. I will probably nail down a few more overs tomorrow and then over the next few days, tick a lot of boxes,' Hazlewood told ICC on Saturday. Hazlewood hasn't played a red-ball game since he featured in the third Test against India at The Gabba in December 2024 due to a calf strain. Then seamer Scott Boland took over and went on to pick a 10-wicket haul against India at Sydney. This means that there's a toss-up between Hazlewood and Boland for the third seamer's slot at Lord's. What does help Hazlewood's case is Hazlewood that he arrives in London on the back of some overs under his belt while winning IPL 2025 for the Royal Challengers Bengaluru, including overcoming a minor shoulder niggle. "I ticked over some good overs just before the (IPL) Final in Ahmedabad in different weather than this, and it was quite a tough session. And then obviously, every time you play a game in the IPL, you're probably going to get almost seven or eight overs in, if you really want to." 'So in and around with warm-ups, and obviously the four overs in the game. And we bowled second a lot of the time in IPL, so that was sort of two warm-ups, so you can squeeze in overs here and there, and things are going pretty well." "Everyone looks in good shape. We've all been in different parts of the world playing or training over the last couple of months, so it's good to get everyone together and catch up with everyone yesterday and the day before and get all on the same page moving forward," he concluded.