GT will expect good returns from Sai Sudharsan, who won the Orange Cap last season.
| Photo Credit: File photo: VIJAY SONEJI
Gujarat Titans doesn’t do anything impulsive. It doesn’t chase the auction. At the IPL 2026 auction, what it did was very on-brand: identify a structural gap, fill it with precision, and trust a system that has rarely let it down.
Jason Holder was not only the headline but also the metaphor. Not the flashiest name on the board, not the most expensive, but exactly what it needed. GT has, at times, looked like a team toggling between one batter short and one bowler light. Holder resolves that duality. And the timing helps: coming off a T20 World Cup where he struck at 174.07 and contributed with the ball. This isn’t just depth, it’s form meeting function.
At the top, GT’s identity remains intact. Shubman Gill and Sai Sudharsan bring a kind of quiet inevitability with innings that build rather than burst. They don’t attack the PowerPlay as much as they occupy it with intent. There’s a calm accumulation, an understanding of tempo that rarely spirals.
At No. 3, Jos Buttler is the disruptor, even if his recent form has been underwhelming. But with Buttler, form is a fickle metric — rhythm can return as suddenly as it disappears.
The middle-order is where the conversation lingers. Washington Sundar, Shahrukh Khan, Rahul Tewatia — there’s a collection of skills rather than certainty.
Tewatia exists in the margins of probability — often finishing games that go slightly off-script. Shahrukh is still oscillating between promise and proof. Washington, though, feels like the hinge. If he moves up and delivers, the batting order stretches into something more robust. Youngster Kumar Kushagra, fresh off a strong domestic T20 campaign, may also get a look in.
With the ball, there is very little ambiguity. Mohammed Siraj, Kagiso Rabada, and Prasidh Krishna provide pace, height, and hit-the-deck consistency.
Rashid Khan, meanwhile, remains the constant though no longer the surprise. He’s still elite despite a below-par last season. If Rashid doesn’t quite click, GT can rely on Sai Kishore and Washington to step up.
There is a slight asymmetry here — a right-arm heavy pace attack in a league increasingly dictated by match-ups. It’s a small detail, but in tight games, small details tend to grow.
Gill, in his third year as captain, sits within a system that doesn’t demand reinvention. There’s continuity here, and with it, a kind of quiet authority. Holder’s presence only adds another layer of on-field intelligence.
Ultimately, GT’s title hopes hinge on whether its middle-order can turn promise into production.
Published – March 20, 2026 11:02 pm IST

