These are not ordinary openers either. They are tempo-setters who can bend the shape of a match in the first six overs, and in a knockout that is exactly where the pressure will live. SRH’s ‘Travishek’ have been doing this long enough to make carnage feel routine, while RR’s pair has been one of the most daring stories of IPL-2026, a lefthanded combination that can cause mayhem from the word go.
For SRH, Head has scored at a strike-rate of 168.66 this season and Abhishek at 206.22, numbers that tell you that it is not uncommon for SRH to be well past 70 in the Powerplay, and from there, the game tends to follow a familiar script.
For Rajasthan, Sooryavanshi’s strike-rate of 232.27 and Jaiswal’s 159.43 capture the same idea from a different angle. One teenage outlier, still only 15, and one established international batter as both strive to turn the new ball into a run-scoring fest.
Beyond the openers, both teams have built batting units that extend the initial advantage. For Rajasthan, Dhruv Jurel has been the connective presence at No. 3, striking at 149.67. Sunrisers, arguably, go a step further. Ishan Kishan at No. 3, with a strike-rate of 178.36, and Heinrich Klaasen at No. 4, with 606 runs and a strike-rate of 159.47, make the middle overs more a continuation of the early pressure.
The bowling, interestingly, feels evenly poised. Jofra Archer’s 21 wickets give Rajasthan a cutting edge, with Nandre Burger and Brijesh Sharma filling roles across phases. The emergence of Yash Raj Punja adds a fresh dimension, while Ravindra Jadeja’s experience lingers as a potential difference-maker despite modest returns. Sunrisers counter with depth rather than a single spearhead. Pat Cummins provides control and leadership; Eshan Malinga’s 19 wickets underline his consistency, and the likes of Sakib Hussain, Praful Hinge and Shivang Kumar offer variety.