Sunrisers Hyderabad head into IPL 2026 with a clear objective of turning a dangerous team into a complete one. Their 2025 season was a study of both promise and frustration. SRH began the season with a flourish, but an inconsistent middle stretch left them well outside the four-team play-off picture, with sixth place the best they could finish. SRH are not rebuilding from the bottom; they are trying to fix the gaps that stopped a high-upside team from becoming a proper contender.

The shape of the 2026 squad tells the same story. Pat Cummins remains captain, Daniel Vettori has been retained as coach, and the core has been retained too. Travis Head, Heinrich Klaasen, Abhishek Sharma, Nitish Kumar Reddy, and Ishan Kishan still define the batting identity, while Liam Livingstone arrives as the major auction swing. Around them, SRH have added or retained enough support pieces to give themselves more flexibility than last year, especially in the all-round and bowling departments. The mission is obvious: keep the batting brutality, but stop being overly dependent on it.
SRH IPL 2026 squad
Strengths of SRH for IPL 2026
A top order that can distort the game before it settles
This is still SRH’s greatest advantage. A top four of Abhishek Sharma, Travis Head, Ishan Kishan and Heinrich Klaasen gives them left-right variety, powerplay violence and enough tempo to force opponents off their plans. Add Nitish Kumar Reddy, Aniket Verma and Liam Livingstone behind them, and SRH have one of the most explosive batting engines in the league on paper.
Multiple pressure points in batting
What makes SRH dangerous is not simply six-hitting. It is the fact that pressure can come from different zones of the innings. Head and Abhishek can break the powerplay. Ishan can maintain the tempo. Nitish gives them a linking role rather than a dead spot in the middle order. Heinrich Klaasen remains their most proven middle-overs destroyer, and Livingstone gives them one more hitter who can attack both spin and pace. That means opponents cannot just survive one phase and expect relief.
Great balance
The squad has been filled with players suited to specific roles. Harsh Dubey, Kamindu Mendis, Brydon Carse, Jack Edwards and Shivam Mavi give SRH more ways to shape an XI than many people will first assume. Dube especially matters because he is a left-arm spin-bowling all-rounder who arrives after a 69-wicket Ranji Trophy season. That profile gives SRH a genuine balance lever rather than forcing it to choose between pure batting and pure bowling.
Continuity in leadership should help them start faster
Pat Cummins remains captain, and Daniel Vettori remains coach. For a side that already knows its batting identity, continuity is an asset. SRH are not spending March figuring out who they are. They are trying to figure out why a side that started and finished IPL 2025 strongly still ended up outside the playoffs because of an inconsistent middle stretch.
Weaknesses of SRH for IPL 2026
The bowling attack still does not look as complete as the batting
This is the central issue. The batting can bully almost anyone. The bowling cannot yet say the same. Pat Cummins, Harshal Patel, Jaydev Unadkat, Zeesha Ansari, Eshan Malinga and Shivam Mavi offer variety, but there is still a gap between having options and having a genuinely intimidating attack. The 2025 season also captures the broader pattern of SRH’s run: huge peaks, but too many wobbling phases in between. That usually points to a side whose control mechanisms are not as strong as its ceiling.
Specialist spin control is still more of a hope than a certainty
On paper, SRH have spin resources. In practice, much depends on how much they trust Zeeshan Ansari, how playable Harsh Dubey becomes immediately, and how often they want to rely on support overs from players like Abhishek or Livingstone. That is not the same as having a clearly settled, top-tier spin attack. Across a long IPL, especially on slower surfaces, that can become a more crucial weakness than just a tactical inconvenience.
Vulnerability to over-selecting batting
This is a trap hidden inside the squad. Because the batting names are so strong, there will always be a temptation to squeeze in one more hitter. But the best SRH XI is unlikely to be the flashiest one. If they keep chasing maximum batting over sustainable bowling balance, they risk replaying the same season arc as 2025: breathtaking highs, then a middle stretch where they look easier to destabilise than a contender should be.
Opportunities for SRH in IPL 2026
Harsh Dubey can change the shape of their season
This is the biggest internal opportunity in the squad. If Dubey becomes good enough to hold a starting spot, SRH get a lot at once: an Indian left-arm spin option, extra depth at No.8, and a route to playing an explosive top six without leaving the attack undercooked. His domestic record does not guarantee IPL success, but it absolutely gives SRH a chance to build a more complete XI than they had for long stretches of last season.
Nitish Kumar Reddy can turn batting from explosive to complete
Head, Abhishek, Klaasen and Livingstone will get the headlines, but Nitish Kumar Reddy may be the hinge. If he nails his role, SRH stop being just a team that attacks hard and start becoming one that controls innings shape. In knockouts and on difficult surfaces, that could be a huge plus, where the difference between a great batting team and a mature one is whether someone is the middle can keep the innings coherent. His presence in this squad makes that evolution possible.
Threats to SRH in IPL 2026
Other contenders look more settled in the attack
Some rival squads look more complete in the bowling department than SRH. RCB carry a pace-spin mix around Josh Hazlewood, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Suyash Sharma, Krunal Pandya and Nuwan Thushara, while GT have a bowling core around Kagiso Rabada, Mohammed Siraj, Prasidh Krishna, Sai Kishore and Washington Sundar. Those teams may not have SRH’s batting ceiling, but they do look harder to expose if conditions turn awkward.
The margin for batting underperformance is still thin
Because SRH’s strongest trait is so clearly batting, any slump there immediately drags the whole side closer to ordinary. They can survive one batter being quiet. They may not comfortably survive two or three. That is why their season still feels more form-sensitive than the most complete squads in the competition.
X-factor player for SRH in IPL 2026
Aniket Verma
Aniket Verma looks like an intriguing presence in the squad. Unlike Abhishek Sharma or Ishan Kishan, he is not central to SRH’s identity. But if he becomes a dependable Indian power option in the lower middle order, SRH’s team construction suddenly becomes much easier. That would allow them to preserve batting depth without overloading slots or weakening balance too much. He is the kind of player who can quietly change the whole of the side if he clicks.
SRH’s strongest probable XI
Abhishek Sharma
Travis Head ✈️
Ishan Kishan
Henirich Klaasen (wk) ✈️
Nitish Kumar Reddy
Liam Livingstone ✈️
Aniket Verma
Harsh Dubey
Pat Cummins
Harshal Patel
Zeeshan Ansari
Impact substitute: Jaydev Unadkat/ Onkar Tarmale
Verdict
SRH look like a top-four calibre side, but one of the two safest title bets.
They have enough batting to overpower anyone, enough continuity to start well, and enough squad flexibility to adapt better than they did in 2025. But compared with the most complete squads, SRH carry more structural risk in the bowling and more dependence on batting rhythm. If Dubey settles, Zeeshan becomes more reliable, and one of Mavi or another seamer gives them a dependable support role, they can absolutely become finalists. If those things do not happen, they are more likely to finish in that third to fifth bracket.

