Shreyas Iyer Blames Fielding and Bowling as PBKS Lose Fourth Straight IPL 2026 Match

Shreyas Iyer blamed fielding and bowling shortcomings for PBKS's three-wicket defeat to Delhi Capitals in IPL 2026, stating the team was 30 runs short. Delhi chased down a target of 211 with an over to spare at the HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala. Axar Patel scored 56 and David Miller added 51 to lead the recovery after early wickets. The loss was PBKS's fourth consecutive defeat, while DC moved to seventh in the standings.

Key Points: IPL 2026: Shreyas Iyer on PBKS Defeat vs DC

  • PBKS lose fourth consecutive IPL match
  • Shreyas Iyer blames fielding and bowling
  • Delhi chase 211 with an over to spare
  • Axar Patel and David Miller lead DC recovery
3 min read

IPL 2026: Shreyas Iyer blames fielding, bowling as PBKS suffer defeat vs DC

Shreyas Iyer criticizes PBKS fielding and bowling after a 3-wicket loss to DC in IPL 2026, saying they were 30 runs short. Delhi chased 211.

"I won't beat around the bush; I'll just say fielding and bowling again. - Shreyas Iyer"

Dharamsala, May 12

Skipper Shreyas Iyer pointed to fielding and bowling shortcomings as key reasons behind Punjab Kings' three-wicket defeat to Delhi Capitals in their IPL 2026 clash, saying the team fell short of executing their plans on a challenging surface.

The Punjab-based franchise also suffered its fourth consecutive loss in the ongoing IPL edition.

Speaking at the post-match presentation, Iyer said the Kings were 30 runs short of a par total given the conditions.

"I won't beat around the bush; I'll just say fielding and bowling again. Absolutely, I feel that it was 30 runs more on this wicket considering how the ball was seaming, and there was variable bounce," he said.

Reflecting on the bowling performance, Iyer admitted that while the pitch offered assistance to seamers, the execution lacked consistency.

"There was absolutely a thought in my mind, but the way the ball was seaming and the way it was helping seamers, I think if we had executed our line and length precisely, we could have been able to extract wickets, but unfortunately again, we didn't," he added.

The PBKS skipper also emphasised the importance of disciplined bowling on such surfaces.

"Still into the surface. I always say that the hard length -- short of a hard length -- is the best ball, especially when a new batsman is coming in. It's not easy to hit because if you keep repeating those balls, at least one ball gives a chance of mis-hitting, and you can get a wicket. We've been short of planning," Iyer concluded.

Delhi pulled off a thrilling three-wicket win over Punjab in a high-scoring IPL 2026 encounter at the HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala, successfully chasing down a massive target of 211 with an over to spare.

Batting first, Punjab posted a strong 210/5, powered by a destructive start from openers Prabhsimran Singh and Priyansh Arya, who tore into Mitchell Starc for 22 runs in the very first over.

The explosive opening set multiple records, including PBKS' highest-ever first-over score in IPL history. The momentum continued as Priyansh raced to a 24-ball half-century, helping Punjab reach 72/0 at the end of the powerplay and 107/2 at the halfway stage despite a brief middle-order wobble.

Skipper Shreyas Iyer anchored the innings brilliantly with an unbeaten 59 off 36 balls, while Suryansh Shedge's late 21* ensured Punjab crossed the 200-run mark and finished strongly at 210/5. For Delhi, Madhav Tiwari and Starc picked up two wickets each.

In reply, Delhi endured a shaky start, losing key wickets early as Arshdeep Singh and Yash Thakur reduced them to 47/3 inside the powerplay. However, skipper Axar Patel led the recovery with a composed yet aggressive 56 off 33 balls, while David Miller provided firepower with a rapid 51 off 28 deliveries. Their 64-run partnership brought DC back into the contest.

Despite PBKS briefly tightening the game by reducing DC to 175/6, the lower order turned the match again. Ashutosh Sharma's quick 24 off 10 balls and crucial contributions from Madhav Tiwari kept the chase alive, before a dramatic penultimate over involving a no-ball and a flurry of boundaries sealed the result. Delhi eventually finished at 216/7 in 19 overs, completing a remarkable chase.

The win lifted Delhi Capitals to seventh place in the points table with five wins from 12 matches, while Punjab Kings suffered their fourth consecutive defeat but remained fourth in the standings.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

M
Michael D
I love how Iyer stays honest about the problems rather than sugarcoating it! He's right about hard length bowling being key. The team just doesn't execute consistently. But credit to DC for a brilliant chase - Ashutosh and Madhav Tiwari in the clutch again! Top entertainment.
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Vikram M
Iyer is absolutely spot on about the fielding. I counted at least 2 dropped catches and a misfield that cost 10+ runs. When you're defending 210, you can't afford that. But also, bowling plans were too predictable - same length, same pace. Indian pitches need variation!
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Priya S
Am I the only one who feels Iyer is deflecting blame from himself? As captain, he's responsible for the team's preparation and execution. Yes, fielding was poor, but the same issues repeating after 4 losses means the leadership isn't finding solutions. Axar as captain really showed composure today.
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Jessica F
That opening over from Starc was brutal - 22 runs in the first over! Priyansh Arya is looking like a genuine talent. But what a turnaround by DC! Miller and Axar's partnership was class. PBKS need to fix their death bowling ASAP or they'll keep losing close matches like this.
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Rohit P
Yaar, I feel for PBKS fans! Fourth straight loss and looking desparate now. But Iyer's point about "short of hard length" is valid - on surfaces with variable bounce, you can't just bowl back of length. The team needs a genuine bowling coach who drills discipline. Right now they're in

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