logo
Chennai Super Kings sow seeds for future success amid ruins of IPL 2025 campaign

Chennai Super Kings sow seeds for future success amid ruins of IPL 2025 campaign

The National26-05-2025

Chennai Super Kings have had one of their worst seasons in IPL, but history might be a lot kinder on them once the decisions they implemented this year begin to bear fruit. A team is always assessed by wins and losses. There is no consolation prize in competitive sport. But you don't win every time. Just like you don't lose every time. What matters in top level sport is what you do when the eyes are not on you, or when you are down. The Super Kings plunged to new depths at the start of the tournament as they got walloped home and away with surprising ease. The five-time IPL champions fell into a death spiral of slow starts in the powerplay followed by desperate batting by an unsettled and misfiring batting line-up. Still, Chennai remained defiant. Coach Stephen Fleming bravely said something to the effect of 'we will see who wins it in the end'. By the end, MS Dhoni returned as captain and many of the players the Super Kings had bought during the auction failed miserably, quietly pushed to the bench. Chennai are a champion franchise and the winning mentality doesn't just vanish overnight. But when even hardcore Chennai fans began admonishing the team's stubborn resistance to modern batting and promising local talent, the team management knew they had a problem on their hands. The great Dhoni also saw his spot in the team being questioned openly and regularly. Their 2025 campaign was pretty much over midway through the season. The only thing that Chennai could now do is plan for the future. That was difficult because Chennai had played almost their entire squad early in the season, proving once again how poor their auction strategy and talent scouts had been. Then, in true Chennai style, the struck upon an ingenious plan. They got in reinforcements, with one eye on the next season, through injury replacements. Dashing young batter Ayush Mhatre, local T20 powerhouse Urvil Patel and South Africa's promising young batter Dewald Brevis came in as injury replacements just as their season was going down the drain. And all three provided an immediate spark to the team, proving beyond doubt that those who made decisions before and during the player auction were way off the mark. In their final league match of the season against tournament favourites Gujarat Titans on Sunday, all three injury replacements set the tone for the 2026 season in one of the more complete batting performances this term. Opener Mhatre (34 from 17 balls), Patel (37 off 19) and Brevis (57 from 23) took Gujarat's bowling apart, helping Chennai post 230-5 – a total that seemed unimaginable in the earlier part of the tournament for Chennai. All three batted at a strike rate of around or above 200, while showing acceptable technique. Which makes you wonder what made the team pick left-of-field batters like Vijay Shankar, Rahul Tripathi and Deepak Hooda at the start of the season. Those three were not high on the wish list of any other franchise, while the new injury replacements were on the radar of many. By the end of the campaign, Brevis (225 runs in six innings) and Mhatre (240 runs in seven games) were easily their most impactful batters. More than the wisdom of selecting the replacements, what mattered more was the tacit admission from Chennai, who are known to pick and back veteran cricketers almost exclusively, that it was time to embrace younger and untested players who might lack experience but offer greater impact, especially with the bat. What also changed this season was the famed Chennai template of picking their team for slow turners at home and dominating the games, while cutting their losses away. This time, wickets at all venues turned out to be equally challenging, making an all-round game and quality personnel more critical than venue specific selections. Chennai's bowling is still respectable, with wrist spinner Noor Ahmed, seamer Anshul Kamboj, all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja and pacer Matheesha Pathirana holding their own. With the addition of potent top and middle order batters, we might see the return of the Chennai we know next year. With or without Dhoni in charge.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pakistan's Akram praises his statue amid social media flak
Pakistan's Akram praises his statue amid social media flak

Zawya

time19 hours ago

  • Zawya

Pakistan's Akram praises his statue amid social media flak

Karachi: Legendary Pakistan cricketer Wasim Akram saluted on Thursday the "effort" of the artist who created a statue of him that has spawned scorn on social media. The statue of Akram -- one of the greatest left-arm fast bowlers to play the game -- was installed outside the southwestern city of Hyderabad's Niaz Stadium in April. Akram is shown bowling wearing the kit of the 1999 World Cup team, when Pakistan were runners-up. Nearby is a statue of a tiger. One fan mocked the statue, saying: "The only thing that looks real is the ball," adding the face looked more like Hollywood hero Sylvester Stallone. The affable Akram, however, took to social media to praise the effort. "Lots of talk about my sculpture being erected at Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad. Mine is definitely better than the tiger," he posted on X. "It's the idea that matters. Credit to the creators, full marks for the effort and thanks to everyone involved." Australia has a history of placing statues of their iconic players outside their stadiums, while India unveiled one of master batter Sachin Tendulkar outside a stadium in Mumbai in 2023. Niaz stadium chief Shiraz Leghari told AFP: "The artist did his best effort, but accepts it doesn't resemble (Akram) a hundred percent." Akram is one of the country's most celebrated cricketers, having represented Pakistan in 104 Tests and 356 ODIs with 414 and 502 wickets respectively. He was the leading wicket-taker in the 1992 World Cup when Pakistan claimed the trophy. © Dar Al Sharq Press, Printing and Distribution. All Rights Reserved. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. ( The Peninsula Newspaper

Ponting reveals Marco Jansen's cricketing superpower
Ponting reveals Marco Jansen's cricketing superpower

Int'l Cricket Council

timea day ago

  • Int'l Cricket Council

Ponting reveals Marco Jansen's cricketing superpower

Marco Jansen is one of cricket's tallest players, but his talent stands out in equal doses. As has been highlighted, he starred early for the Proteas, forming a formidable fast bowling tandem with Kagiso Rabada that wreaked all kinds of havoc on Australia's top order in the World Test Championship Final's first day. It was Rabada that claimed more of the plaudits with yet another five-wicket haul at Lord's, but Jansen's bowling was equally as impressive. The left-armer finished with 3/49 from 14 overs and his scalps included Marnus Labuschagne and Travis Head. A finger injury while fielding on day two threatened to curtail his day, though a return to the bowling crease soon after proved he was unimpeded, removing Marnus Labuschagne for 22. Marco Jansen gets the big wicket of Travis Head | WTC25 Final South Africa's Marco Jansen traps Travis Head on the final bowl before Lunch on Day 1. Jansen, still just 25, broke into the Proteas' Test side in December 2021, such were the raps on him. He hasn't yet looked back in the game's longest format, but all the while has emerged as a world beater in white-ball cricket too. Jansen plied his trade with the Punjab Kings in the 2025 IPL, consistently taking breakthrough wickets and occasionally scoring important runs. His domestic campaign in India gave cricketing royalty Ricky Ponting a close-up perspective on the all-rounder, and Ponting is unsurprised that South Africa's towering talent has stood out at Lord's. Marco Jansen completes a brilliant juggling catch | Sobha POTD, Day 1 | WTC25 Final Marco Jansen juggled thrice but held on in the end to get rid of the dangerous Steve Smith on Day 1 of the World Test Championship 2023-25 Final. 'He's pretty quiet and pretty laid back,' he told ICC Digital after day one of the WTC Final. 'Nothing really affects him too much. Regardless of if he's had a great day or not such a great day, he remains the same person. 'Whether that's internally and the way that he thinks about the game or the way that he is around the dressing room. But I think like most South Africans, you can tell there's an ultra competitive streak inside him. 'And once he gets out on the field, then it's game on.' Jansen credited Ponting's coaching at the Punjab Kings, having helped to evolve the South African's mental approach to the game. 'I learned a lot from him,' Jansen told ICC Digital before the World Test Championship decider. 'Especially from a mental point of view. He's always positive, he always tries to see or sees the good stuff instead of the bad stuff, if that makes sense. And I think that's why he's a legend of the game, because you always lean towards what could happen instead of what could go wrong. He's helped a lot in that regard.' Ponting expects Jansen to take his game to even loftier heights in the next World Test Championship cycle, saying there's no ceiling on where he might get to as a multi-faceted contributor. 'I think he's going to… be one of the best all-rounders in Test match cricket in the world in the next couple of years,' Ponting continued. 'I've loved working with him and I just think he's an extreme talent that is still so young in his international career.' Rabada and Jansen tear into the Aussie tail | WTC25 Final South Africa quicks Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen make short work of Australia's tailenders in the first innings.

Australia fight back in WTC final after Rabada's havoc
Australia fight back in WTC final after Rabada's havoc

Gulf Today

time2 days ago

  • Gulf Today

Australia fight back in WTC final after Rabada's havoc

Mitchell Starc led Australia's recovery as the defending champions fought back with the ball against South Africa on the first day of the World Test Championship final at Lord's on Wednesday. Australia were dismissed for just 212 after South Africa captain Temba Bavuma won the toss in overcast, bowler-friendly, conditions, with spearhead quick Kagiso Rabada taking 5-51. But at stumps South Africa had slumped to 43-4 in reply, a deficit of 169 runs. Given the strength of both teams' pace attacks, the key question was always likely to be which side could put enough runs on the scoreboard. Australia's total certainly looked a lot healthier when left-arm quick Starc had Aiden Markram playing on for a duck before dismissing Ryan Rickelton (16) to leave South Africa floundering at 19-2. Novice number three Wiaan Mulder was reprieved on one when wicketkeeper Alex Carey dropped a sitter off Starc. But he added just five more runs before he was bowled by Australia captain Pat Cummins, having taken 44 balls to make six. It took Bavuma 31 balls to score his first runs, a two off Josh Hazlewood greeted with raucous cheers by South Africa fans at Lord's. But shortly before the close, Hazlewood bowled Tristan Stubbs. David Bedingham ended the day's play with consecutive boundaries off Cummins to be eight not out, with Bavuma unbeaten on three. Rampant Rabada: Australia were in desperate trouble in the early overs in London, reduced to 16-2 after losing Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green in a single Rabada over. Khawaja fell for a 20-ball duck in the seventh over, edging Rabada to Bedingham at first slip. Three balls later 12-1 became 16-2 when Green nicked low to second slip, where Markram held a superb diving catch. Rabada had now taken two wickets for four runs in four balls. The 30-year-old, who has more than 300 Test wickets, is playing his first Test after serving a one-month ban for cocaine use earlier this year. Australia have struggled to find an opening partner for Khawaja since David Warner's retirement 17 months ago, with Marnus Labuschagne the latest batsman tried out. The 30-year-old, without a Test century for nearly two years, battled hard for 17 off 56 balls before being dismissed by classic fast-bowling from towering left-armer Marco Jansen. Australia had been in similar trouble in the 2023 final against India across London at the Oval, only for Steve Smith and Travis Head to both score hundreds as they turned the match in their favour. Head, however, could only manage 11 before he glanced Jansen, with Kyle Verreynne holding an excellent diving one-handed catch. But star batsman Smith (66) and all-rounder Beau Webster (72) repaired the damage with a fifth-wicket stand of 79. Yet in what could to be prove a key moment in the match, Webster would have been lbw to Rabada for eight if South Africa had reviewed an original not out decision. Agencies Scoreboard Australia 1st innings U Khawaja c Bedingham b Rabada0 M Labuschagne c Verreyne b Jansen17 C Green c Markram b Rabada4 S Smith c Jansen b Markram66 T Head c Verreynne b Jansen11 B Webster c Bedingham b Rabada72 A Carey b Maharaj23 P Cummins b Rabada1 M Starc b Rabada1 N Lyon b Jansen0 J Hazlewood not out0 Extras (lb7, nb10)17 Total (all out, 56.4 overs, 275 mins)212 Fall of wickets : 1-12 (Khawaja), 2-16 (Green), 3-46 (Labuschagne), 4-67 (Head), 5-146 (Smith), 6-192 (Carey), 7-199 (Cummins), 8-210 (Webster), 9-211 (Lyon), 10-212 (Starc) Bowling: Rabada 15.4-5-51-5 (1nb); Jansen 14-5-49-3 (2nb); Ngidi 8-0-45-0 (2nb); Mulder 11-3-36-0 (5nb); Maharaj 6-0-19-1; Markram 2-0-5-1 South Africa 1st Innings A Markram b Starc0 R Rickelton c Khawaja b Starc16 W Mulder b Cummins6 T Bavuma not out3 T Stubbs b Hazlewood2 D Bedingham not out8 Extras (lb8)8 Total (4 wkts, 22 overs, 107 mins)43 Fall of wickets: 1-0 (Markram), 2-19 (Rickelton), 3-25 (Mulder), 4-30 (Stubbs) Bowling : Starc 7-3-10-2; Hazlewood 7-3-10-1; Cummins 7-3-14-1; Lyon 1-0-1-0 Match position: South Africa are 169 runs behind with six first-innings wickets standing

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store