Rahane eyes KKR comeback – Tezzbuzz
Kolkata, Mar 21: Kolkata Knight Riders captain Ajinkya Rahane has made it clear that the team’s priority for IPL 2026 is a strong and consistent start, after a disappointing 2025 season that saw them finish near the bottom of the table.
KKR managed just five wins in 14 matches last year, finishing eighth despite Rahane being their top performer with the bat. The veteran scored 390 runs at an average of 35, but his efforts were not enough to lift the team’s overall performance. Now, heading into a new season, Rahane is focused on correcting those mistakes rather than hiding from them.
He has emphasized that consistency, not short bursts of form, will define their campaign. According to him, IPL is a long tournament where early momentum matters, but sustaining performance is what separates contenders from failures. That’s a direct admission of what KKR lacked last season—stability.
The franchise has responded aggressively by reshaping its squad. Big names like Andre Russell and Venkatesh Iyer have been released, signaling a clear shift in strategy. In their place, KKR has invested heavily, including a massive ₹25.20 crore signing of Cameron Green, making it one of the most talked-about moves of the auction.
The batting lineup now looks more explosive on paper, with international firepower in Finn Allen and Tim Seifert, alongside experienced campaigners like Sunil Narine and Rahane himself. But here’s the reality—on paper means nothing in IPL. KKR had enough talent last year too and still failed.
Rahane has chosen to stay cautious when it comes to revealing combinations and batting order, which is expected this early in the season. However, he did confirm that most players are in good form and the team environment is positive. That’s standard pre-season talk—every team says this. What matters is execution under pressure.
At 37, Rahane is not just leading the side; he’s also under scrutiny. Leadership in IPL is brutally judged on results, not mindset speeches. His “stay positive” approach sounds good, but unless it translates into wins in the first half of the tournament, the same criticism will return quickly.
KKR’s challenge is simple but brutal: prove last season was a fluke. If they stumble early again, no amount of squad overhaul or optimism will save them.
This season is not about rebuilding—it’s about delivering.
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