In cricket’s shortest format, the journey from hope to despair is often a freefall; and the Chennai Super Kings are currently feeling the gravity. As the IPL 2026 action moves to the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium this Sunday, April 5, the narrative couldn't be more polarized.
The defending champions, Royal Challengers Bengaluru, appear primed and well-rounded, having dismantled Sunrisers Hyderabad in their opener. In contrast, the Chennai Super Kings arrive in the Garden City on the back of consecutive bruising defeats, struggling to find their identity in the post-MS Dhoni era.
For years, this matchup was famously one-sided in favor of Chennai. However, the momentum has shifted decisively. RCB has won four of their last six encounters against CSK, including a landmark win at Chepauk last season. On Sunday, Bengaluru has a chance to do something they’ve never done before: win four in a row against their arch-rivals.
The statistical contrast in the PowerPlay highlights the current gap in intent:
CSK Powerplay run rate (since 2025): 8.70 (Lowest in the league)
RCB Powerplay run rate (since 2025): 9.94 (Second-best in the league)
| Category | Royal Challengers Bengaluru | Chennai Super Kings |
|---|---|---|
| IPL 2026 Record | 1 Win / 0 Losses | 0 Wins / 2 Losses |
| Captain | Rajat Patidar | Ruturaj Gaikwad |
| Last Meeting | RCB won by 6 wickets | — |
| Key Player | Virat Kohli (69* in opener) | Sanju Samson (Dhoni’s "successor") |
| Bowling Lead | Jacob Duffy (3/22) | Matt Henry |
We are not defending, we are chasing another title. We are hungry like we were last year. Lots of people have forgotten that we are champions.Jitesh Sharma, RCB Wicketkeeper
Sanju Samson’s much-anticipated arrival at CSK as MS Dhoni’s heir, fueled by his outstanding T20 World Cup performances, generated massive excitement. Yet the start has been unforgiving: scores of 6 and 7 in his first two innings have exposed vulnerabilities in the middle order. CSK is now urgently seeking inspiration, perhaps banking on the short boundaries at the Chinnaswamy to unlock Samson’s natural stroke play.
The only cloud over the RCB camp is the fitness of Australian quick Josh Hazlewood. While New Zealand’s Jacob Duffy was the hero of the opening night with a 3/22 haul, Hazlewood has been spotted bowling in the nets. The RCB management has treated his availability like a "State secret," but with Duffy in form, the defending champions are under no immediate pressure to rush their frontline pacer back.
Bhuvi’s milestone: Bhuvneshwar Kumar sits at 199 wickets. One more scalp will make him only the second bowler in IPL history to reach the 200-wicket landmark.
200+ capital: The Chinnaswamy leads the IPL with 35 totals of 200-plus. With an average run rate of 9.73 at this venue, bowlers are expected to find no mercy.
Brevis return? CSK may finally receive a boost with the potential return of Dewald Brevis, who practiced ahead of the last game but remains a game-time decision.
Aggression is key: In the last six games at this ground, the chasing team has won four times, with the last three seeing 200-plus scores overhauled.
On the surface, this no longer appears to be a contest between evenly matched sides. RCB look composed, assertive, and are playing at a home venue that perfectly suits their "hit through the line" approach. For CSK to avoid a fourth consecutive defeat to their rivals, they will need to outdo RCB at their own style of play, adopting a level of high-risk aggression that they have yet to display this season.