Kolkata Knight Riders’ call to spend big on Cameron Green came under immediate scrutiny after the Australian all-rounder did not bowl in their IPL 2026 opener against the Mumbai Indians. The debate sharpened further when captain Ajinkya Rahane, asked after the match why Green had not bowled, said that the question should be directed at Cricket Australia. Soon after, Cricket Australia clarified that KKR had been fully aware of Green’s temporary bowling restriction before the tournament.
Now, Abhishek Nayar, head coach of KKR, had defended the franchise’s position in a pre-match press conference ahead of their SRH assignment. KKR had gone hard for Green at the IPL 2026 auction, signing him for a record ₹25.20 crore after Andre Russell’s retirement from the league. Ahead of the season, Nayar had already spoken of IPL 2026 as a transition period for the franchise and a “season of opportunities” in the post-Russell phase.
Explaining the thinking behind the move, Nayar said the franchise had not viewed the auction through a narrow lens. “Picking a player in an auction is not always very short-sighted. There is always a horizon. You look at what a player has done over a number of years and the skill set he possesses.”
Nayar added that T20 decisions are often judged by outcomes that are not fully predictable at the time of the auction. “This sport is interesting in that way that a lot of times you pick a player with certain prowess, and sometimes they may even do the skill you are talking about and not perform. But for us, Cameron Green, the cricketer and the all-rounder, was really important.”
He also said KKR had factored in the usual variables that surround a major buy, but believed Green’s upside still justified the investment. “You take a lot of things into consideration at times, whether there is an injury, fitness updates. But eventually, I think, when the auction happens and the tournament happens, it is not imagined. So whatever decision you make, you don’t know what the future lies and what the future may hold.”
Nayar says KKR invested in Green’s peak value
With Green’s usage already becoming a talking point after one game, Nayar’s remarks were effectively a defence of the original auction logic rather than a denial of the present problem. KKR had bought a player they believed could offer high-end value as an all-rounder over the course of the season and eventually the cycle, even if the early circumstances had complicated that plan.
“In that aspect, we as a franchise always invest in the player and what the player at his best can bring to our table, and we know what Cameron can do,” Nayar said. “There are things that sometimes are very unfortunate. It’s not in your control. But that’s the sport, and that’s the beauty of the sport.”
He then made the Andre Russell connection explicit. “We always consider best-case scenarios. Yes, you want backups; you pick players who do certain things. But when we went into the auction, very simple. If Russ wasn’t there, who is the next best all-rounder that we felt in the world and could add a lot of value and could take that Russell legacy forward in a different role? We felt Cameron can do that for us.” Nayar also conceded that the start has not gone the way KKR would have wanted. “It’s just unfortunate that he has not been able to do it so far.”
At the centre of the discussion, then, is not just the role Cameron Green played against MI but the larger question of how franchises balance price, skill set, availability and medical management when they commit heavily to a player expected to shape a new cycle. In KKR’s case, Nayar has made it clear that the franchise still sees the Green call through that long-range lens.


