IPL 2026: Wide yorkers or hard lengths? CSK might have found a template to solve death-over issues
In the IPL 2026 game against Delhi Capitals on Saturday, at the M.A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai, as Anshul Kamboj ran in to bowl the 18th over from around the wicket, aiming for wide yorkers, it was hard not to think back to Chennai Super Kings’ previous game against Royal Challengers Bengaluru, where Tim David had taken apart the death overs.
The aftermath of that defeat had triggered comparisons across leagues, pointing to a familiar pattern in the Super Kings setup: a one-dimensional death-overs plan built around wide yorkers from around the wicket, seen across the SA20, MLC and IPL.
The idea is simple. Keep the ball out of the batter’s reach. But it is also a narrow-margin method. Miss even slightly, and the same delivery becomes a scoring option, as RCB showed.
After losing Nathan Ellis in the pre-season, CSK’s approach took shape quickly. Matt Henry and Khaleel Ahmed were tasked with making early inroads, using seam movement and inswing. The middle overs were about control, before returning to wide yorkers at the death, regardless of personnel.
The returns were poor. Henry leaked runs at 13 an over across three games, Noor Ahmed went wicketless till the contest against DC, and the predictability at the death allowed RCB to score over 85 in the last five overs, including a 30-run over off Jamie Overton. Punjab Kings had earlier chased down 200-plus in Chepauk without much resistance.
The game against Delhi, however, hinted at a shift. CSK brought in Akeal Hosein for Henry and handed a debut to the left-armer Gurjapneet Singh.
What went right for CSK’s bowling against DC?
Set 213 after a Sanju Samson hundred, Delhi was off the block in a jiffy, racing to 61 in 4.5 overs.
The first check came through Khaleel, who removed KL Rahul, with Pathum Nissanka following soon after. At 66/2 at the end of the PowerPlay, the chase was still on track.
The expected move was Noor in the seventh over, in line with CSK’s usual pattern. Instead, Ruturaj Gaikwad turned to Gurjapneet, reading the assistance for seam off the red soil surface. The debutant responded immediately, striking with his first ball.
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More than the wicket, it was the method that stood out. Gurjapneet went hard into the pitch, using chest-high, bodyline deliveries to push David Miller onto the back foot. This was not containment. It was an attempt to disrupt.
With two new batters at the crease, Overton followed with a similar approach. Having been expensive earlier while chasing wide yorkers, he shifted back to his strengths, hitting the deck at pace and extracting uncomfortable bounce. Strokeplay became restrictive, and the pressure told. Overton finished with 4/18, breaking the chase open.
At the death, there was also a subtle adjustment. Kamboj ran in with a field set for the wide yorker, but targeted middle stump instead. The line change, combined with the visual cue of the field, forced indecision. Execution, rather than variation alone, made the difference.
This time, the plan held.
Whether this marks a lasting shift is still uncertain. But for the first time this season, CSK’s bowling looked less like a fixed template and more like a set of options.
Published on Apr 12, 2026