Remember that evening on May 26, 2024? Kolkata Knight Riders just decimated Sunrisers Hyderabad to win their 3rd IPL title, after a decade-long wait.
A team which had gone through a lot of changes since the Gautam Gambhir years, looked like embracing a new era under their vibrant captain, Shreyas Iyer.
Fast-forward to IPL 2026, and the franchise sits rock-bottom in the points table - 10th with 0 wins from 5 matches (4 losses, 1 no-result), and an entire unit who look utterly clueless against quality attacks.
The latest one has been on Tuesday, as Ajinkya Rahane and his team were bamboozled at the Chepauk by Chennai Super Kings.
How did a title-winning side become this dreadful in just two seasons? A team that promised so much under Iyer, have undergone
many changes since and now looks like a cheap second copy. A road which looked so smooth and promising for more joyride, has become bumpy and full of roadblocks and potholes, as the Knights have fallen repeatedly with their fragile armour.
The seeds were sown in the IPL 2025 mega auction and compounded by disastrous leadership choices, reckless spending, on-field cluelessness, and cruel luck with injuries. Here's a point-by-point autopsy.
Releasing Shreyas Iyer and splurging Rs 23.75 crore on Venkatesh Iyer
The biggest self-inflicted wound? Letting go of proven captain Shreyas Iyer after the 2024 triumph. Punjab Kings pounced, acquiring him for a record Rs 26.75 crore - and he has repaid them handsomely. Under Shreyas, PBKS have been a revelation in IPL 2026: sitting near the top of the table with clinical chases and dominant wins, including a recent unbeaten 69 off 33 balls to hunt down 220 against SRH. His leadership has transformed a perennial underachiever into a contender.
In contrast, KKR went all-in on Venkatesh Iyer, buying him back for a staggering Rs 23.75 crore (third-most expensive in the auction) after opting not to retain him cheaper as a capped player. The move was baffling then and looks catastrophic now. Venkatesh has failed to provide the explosive middle-order impact or leadership spark expected, leaving a massive hole where Shreyas once delivered stability and big moments.
Appointing Ajinkya Rahane as captain - a Bamboozling choice
KKR handed the armband to 37-year-old Ajinkya Rahane, an experienced but uninspiring leader whose best days as a dynamic T20 batter are long gone. Rahane's strike rate has drawn criticism (though he defensively called critics "jealous"), and his on-field decisions lack the steel needed in a high-stakes league. At an age when most players are winding down, saddling him with captaincy in a rebuild phase feels like a desperate, low-risk gamble that has backfired spectacularly. The team plays without aggression or clear direction under him.
Horrific Auction buys and Squad mismanagement
KKR's auction strategy was a masterclass in overpaying for mediocrity while clinging to dead wood. They shelled out Rs 25.20 crore for Cameron Green - making him the most expensive overseas player in IPL history, in a bidding war, only for the all-rounder to underwhelm. Anrich Nortje was another mega-auction pickup who added little spark last year. Rachin Ravindra continues to warm the bench despite Green failing to make any impact in the game.
Meanwhile, they retained or retained low-impact domestic names like Ramandeep Singh, Manish Pandey, and Vaibhav Arora, overlooking more dynamic options who could have injected pace or firepower. The result: a squad that looks expensive on paper but disjointed and ineffective on the field.
Clueless performances in IPL 2026
KKR's on-field execution has been baffling. Batters have repeatedly collapsed under pressure, bowlers have leaked runs, and there is zero momentum. Early losses to MI (by 6 wickets), SRH (by 65 runs), and LSG (by 3 wickets) show a side that cannot close games or adapt.
The likes of Finn Allen, Rinku Singh have not fired with the bat, while their second-string bowling has failed to make any impact. Angkrish Raghuvanshi has been the only shining star in the galaxy of Knights.
Rahane's leadership is reactive and timid, lacking the tactical edge or motivational fire to rally a star-studded but underperforming group. The coaching setup boasts big names and pedigree, yet the "think tank" has produced no tangible strategies, no mid-season tweaks, and no visible progress. It's all talk, no results - a glossy facade hiding tactical bankruptcy.
Andre Russell as 'Power Coach': A cruel irony as KKR batters look utterly powerless
Perhaps the most damning indictment is Andre Russell's new role as Power Coach. The legendary all-rounder, fresh off retirement, was brought in to "teach people how to hit sixes. " Yet KKR's batters have been anything but powerful - timid, one-dimensional, and repeatedly bundled out or strangled in chases. Russell's presence in the dugout has become a symbol of the franchise's disconnect: a six-hitting icon watching his pupils flounder helplessly. If even the Power Coach can't ignite the batting, what hope is there?
Injuries and Sanctions have played their Part
To be fair, fate has not been kind. KKR entered the season already decimated in the pace department - the worst-hit team in the league. Harshit Rana (knee surgery) and Akash Deep (back stress injury) are ruled out for the bulk or entirety of the season; Matheesha Pathirana missed the start with a calf strain; Mustafizur Rahman was unavailable due to external factors. Replacements like Navdeep Saini haven't been good enough.
KKR's two-year nosedive is no accident - it's the predictable outcome of a chain reaction of dreadful decisions at the top. Unless radical changes happen, and fast, this once-proud franchise risks becoming the league's new punchline. From Champions to Bottom Dwellers, the gruesome reality of the Knights is baffling, but a harsh reality of their execrable tactics both on and off the field.







