Chennai Super Kings kept their IPL 2026 campaign alive with a commanding eight-wicket win over Delhi Capitals at the Kotla, a result that has dramatically altered the playoff equation for both teams. CSK’s disciplined bowling, led by Akeal Hosein, restricted DC to a below-par 155/7 before Sanju Samson’s unbeaten 87 off 52 ensured a stress-free chase with 15 balls to spare. More importantly for CSK, the victory pushed them back into the top-four conversation after weeks of inconsistency. With momentum finally building and two of their remaining four games against the struggling Lucknow Super Giants, CSK have given themselves a genuine shot at a late surge.
They are only two points behind the cluster of teams tied on 12 points, but the table remains extremely congested. One strong week can push them into the top four; one bad week can end their campaign. After spending most of the season drifting around mid-table, CSK are now locked in a tight playoff race.
The only major exception came in 2019, when Sunrisers Hyderabad qualified with 12 points – still the only instance of a team qualifying with fewer than 14 points and a team qualifying despite having more losses than winsIn most seasons, 7 wins keeps you alive, 8 wins puts you in control.
The scheduling works in their favour. Two matches against bottom-placed Lucknow Super Giants offer a direct route into contention before tougher fixtures against Sunrisers Hyderabad and Gujarat Titans.But there is very little margin for error now. A defeat in either LSG game would significantly complicate their path and drag Net Run Rate back into the equation.
CSK’s campaign has finally begun showing signs of stability after weeks of alternating wins and losses. They have now won two of their last three matches and, more importantly, have looked tactically clearer in those victories.Their bowling attack has started adapting better to surfaces that demand discipline rather than outright pace. Against Delhi Capitals, CSK squeezed the middle overs expertly, conceding just 155 despite conditions easing later in the evening. Akeal Hosein’s control up front and the attack’s willingness to bowl into the pitch reflected a side finally understanding its best template.The batting, meanwhile, looks far calmer when Sanju Samson anchors the innings. His unbeaten 87 against DC was not just a match-winning knock but a reminder that CSK’s chase structure depends heavily on one senior batter controlling tempo through the middle overs.Yet the inconsistency has not disappeared entirely. CSK have still not won more than two consecutive matches all season, and their defeats have often stemmed from batting slowdowns in the middle overs rather than outright collapses. Their Net Run Rate of +0.151 also shows few dominant wins they have produced compared to the teams above them.
CSK’s biggest concern is not their bowling or even their Net Run Rate. It is the fragile structure of their batting whenever Sanju Samson does not bat deep.Too often this season, CSK’s innings have lacked tempo once early wickets fall. Samson’s unbeaten 87 against Delhi Capitals once again highlighted how dependent the side is on him to manage difficult phases and pace chases. When he anchors, CSK look composed. When he falls early, the middle order has repeatedly struggled to recover rhythm.The issue becomes more significant because CSK’s remaining fixtures include two high-pressure games against playoff rivals after the LSG double-header. Against stronger bowling attacks like SRH and GT, relying on one batter to absorb pressure becomes risky.Their supporting cast has contributed in patches – Kartik Sharma’s unbeaten 41 against DC was valuable – but the team still lacks consistent finishing power lower down the order. That leaves CSK vulnerable in tight chases and in a crowded mid-table race where margins are razor-thin, one batting failure could undo weeks of recovery.
CSK are no longer staring at elimination. The win over Delhi Capitals has dragged them firmly back into contention and, for the first time in weeks, their playoff path is largely in their own hands.But this is still a side operating without much cushion. Their batting remains heavily dependent on Samson, their Net Run Rate is modest, and two difficult fixtures await after the LSG games.The equation is simple now: beat the teams below them and steal one result against the top sides. Do that, and CSK should qualify. Fail, and another inconsistent season will end with what-ifs.