IPL 2026: 4 Teams that could finish in bottom four

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Ten teams. Four playoff spots. The math means six franchises will go home early, four of them anchoring the bottom of a table with no room for reputation. The squads that look dangerous on paper are not the question. The question is which structural flaws survive 14 matches of exposure.

This is not about the weakest rosters in the competition. Three of the four teams on this list have either reached an IPL final or won a title within the last three years. The cases here rest on squad construction decisions (bowling gaps, injured allrounders, a retirement that no auction could fix) that are likely to compound rather than self-correct as the season progresses.

TL;DR

  • SRH: 2024 finalists who slipped to 6th in 2025; reduced to 29/4 in 8 overs vs LSG in their 2026 opener. Their batting floor problem is real.
  • KKR: Andre Russell retired after 140 IPL matches at SR 174.18; Cameron Green at ₹25.20 crore is a fine allrounder, not a Russell replacement
  • RR: Joint-worst in IPL 2025 (4 wins, 14 matches), then traded bowling allrounders for a batter, before Sam Curran was ruled out for the entire 2026 season
  • CSK: First-ever 10th-place finish in IPL 2025; Dhoni injured for the opening weeks of 2026; no confirmed death-bowling specialist in the pace attack

4) Sunrisers Hyderabad — Grade: C

Travis Head, Abhishek Sharma, Heinrich Klaasen, Nitish Kumar Reddy: on a fast surface, this batting lineup has no equals in the competition. Most analysts had SRH somewhere in their playoff conversation for 2026. The 2024 final run felt like a baseline, not an outlier.

The data disagrees. SRH finished 6th in IPL 2025 (six wins, seven losses, one no-result), a year removed from playing in the final. That is not a minor regression. Their bowling unit, which was never more than functional even during the 2024 campaign, lost reliability in the off-season. Brydon Carse, their most effective pace option, missed SRH's first two IPL 2026 matches with a bruised hand. Against LSG on April 5, SRH were reduced to 29 for 4 inside 8 overs on a surface that offered no demons. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Klaasen hauled them to 156/9. Rishabh Pant knocked off the target with an unbeaten 68 off 50 balls without breaking rhythm.

Key stat: SRH scored 156/9 against LSG. When their top four combined for 29, their middle-order maximum was 156. Against a competent bowling unit, that is a losing total more often than not.

SRH's template (bat first, post 200, defend through raw aggression) works when Head and Abhishek fire. Opponents now have two seasons of data to exploit the formula. Harshal Patel, Jaydev Unadkat, and Harsh Dubey are steady operators; none have the wicket-taking rhythm to defend 175 in the last four overs against Pant or Kohli. SRH fell from finalists to 6th in one season. The structural flaw remains.

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