There are phases in cricket where performance alone should settle debates. This is one of those moments. And yet, Shreyas Iyer continues to exist in a strange grey zone, dominating the biggest T20 league in the world while remaining outside India’s T20 core. If numbers still matter in selection, then what Iyer is doing in Indian Premier League 2026 should have already forced a rethink.
IPL 2026: Numbers That Demand Selection
Let’s start with the raw data, because it is impossible to ignore:
- Matches: 5
- Runs: 203
- Average: 67.67
- Strike Rate: 187.96
- Highest Score: 69*
- Fifties: 3
- Sixes: 14
These are elite metrics in any T20 league. But context elevates them further. Iyer is not an opener cashing in during powerplays. He is batting at No. 4, often entering during transitional phases, where risk is higher and tempo control is critical.
A strike rate touching 188 at that position is extraordinary. Pair that with an average nearing 70, and you are looking at one of the most efficient T20 batting performances in the world right now.
Impact Innings: Runs That Win Matches
Statistics can sometimes flatter. These do not.
- 66 (35) vs Mumbai Indians – Chased down 196 at Wankhede
- 69 (33) vs Sunrisers Hyderabad* – Anchored a 220-run chase, unbeaten
- 50 (29) vs Chennai Super Kings – Controlled a 210 chase at Chepauk
- 18 (11) vs Gujarat Titans – Quick contribution in a shorter outing
Three fifties in high-pressure chases. Different venues. Different conditions. Different bowling attacks.
This is not form. This is control over the format.
The Evolution: From Anchor to Finisher
For years, Iyer was boxed into a limiting category, the “anchor.” His pre-2024 strike rate hovered around 130, and questions around his intent, especially against pace, were constant.
That player no longer exists.
Strike Rate Transformation
- 2024: 146.86
- 2025: 175.07
- 2026: 187.96
This is not incremental improvement. This is a complete shift in batting philosophy.
He has become what T20 cricket demands today, a hybrid batter. Someone who can absorb pressure early and dismantle attacks later.
Technical Reinvention: Fixing Every Weakness
Great players evolve. Elite players eliminate weaknesses. Iyer has done the latter.
1. The Short Ball Problem — Solved
- Once his biggest flaw, it is now a strength.
- Average vs short ball (2024): ~18
- Average (2025): 88
- Strike Rate vs short ball: 226
He has not just survived the bouncer, he has weaponised it.
2. Outside Off-Stump Vulnerability — Reversed
Earlier, bowlers trapped him in the fifth-sixth stump corridor.
- Strike rate in that zone (2024): 120.5
- Strike rate (2026): 209
The shift from tentative pushes to aggressive intent has changed how bowlers approach him.
3. Technical Adjustments
Working with Pravin Amre, Iyer:
- Adopted a more open, upright stance
- Developed a higher, looped backlift
- Improved balance to play the ball later
These changes explain why he now handles both pace and spin with equal authority.
The Captaincy Factor: Leadership at an Elite Level
There is another dimension that strengthens Iyer’s case, leadership.
Only captain to lead three franchises to IPL finals
- Delhi Capitals (2020)
- Kolkata Knight Riders (2024 – Champions)
- Punjab Kings (2025)
- Win percentage: ~60% (highest among IPL captains)
Under Ricky Ponting at Punjab Kings, he has created a system where players thrive, including himself.
There is a composure to his captaincy that draws comparisons with MS Dhoni, combined with the consistency of Virat Kohli. Yet, his style is distinctly modern, data-aware, adaptable, and aggressive when needed.
The Price Tag and Pressure: ₹26.75 Crore Justified
When Punjab Kings invested ₹26.75 crore in him, it was not just for runs. It was for leadership, stability, and match-winning ability.
So far, he has justified every rupee.
More importantly, he has done so after adversity. A serious spleen injury during the 2025 Australia tour saw him lose 7 kg and raised concerns about his longevity. What followed in IPL 2026 is not just a comeback, it is a peak.
Comparison With the Best: Where Iyer Stands
Even in a league featuring players like Virat Kohli, Sai Sudharsan, and Heinrich Klaasen, Iyer stands out.
- Most fifties in IPL 2026 so far (3)
- Strike rate higher than many established middle-order players
- Average above 60 while maintaining aggression
Unlike pure finishers, he sustains impact across longer innings. Unlike anchors, he scores at elite pace.
That combination is rare.
The Selection Question: What More Does He Need to Do?
This is where the conversation becomes uncomfortable.
India continues to search for a reliable No. 4 in T20s. At the same time, a player is dominating that exact role in the IPL with unmatched efficiency.
So what is missing?
It cannot be:
- Form
- Strike rate
- Adaptability
- Leadership
The only remaining explanation is perception.
Once labelled an anchor, Iyer seems to be battling an outdated image, even as his game has evolved dramatically.