NEW DELHI: Arun Jaitley Stadium was painted yellow on Tuesday evening. Everywhere the eye went, in every stand that celebrated the best that Delhi has ever produced, a trove of yellow jerseys was unmissable. They were there in groups and in small numbers, but their presence was hard to ignore. At one point, chants of ‘Dhoni, Dhoni’ rang out. Ironically, the former India captain, or ‘Thala’ as he’s more affectionately called by the Chennai Super Kings faithful, hadn’t even travelled to the capital and is yet to play a game this IPL season.At the other end, bar a small section of DC Toli, Delhi Capitals fans were conspicuous by their absence. The blue-and-red of the home side had little to show for themselves and little cause to erupt over the course of Match 48 of IPL 2026.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!Having won the toss and opted to bat, DC never got going, and only a late show from Tristan Stubbs (38 from 31 balls) and Sameer Rizvi (40 from 24) helped reach a respectable 155/7.Chennai Super Kings, led by Sanju Samson‘s 87 off 52 balls at the top of the order, and Kartik Sharma’s unbeaten 41 from 31, sauntered to the total with 15 balls and 8 wickets to spare.As a result, DC are seventh in the IPL standings with one win in the last five played or two in the last eight. They are only better than the Kolkata Knight Riders, Mumbai Indians and Lucknow Super Giants at this juncture.Besides harbouring slim hopes of making the playoffs, what is common to this bunch is their woeful home record. MI (33.3 per cent win record at home), KKR (25 per cent), DC (20 per cent), and LSG (0 per cent) have all had a dreadful home run, which goes hand-in-hand with their overall poor season.In contrast, CSK, who are sixth after back-to-back victories, have the third-best home record (60 per cent win record at home). The four teams in playoff spots – Punjab Kings, Royal Challengers Bengaluru, Sunrisers Hyderabad and Rajasthan Royals – all have strong home win records of 75 per cent, 80 per cent, 60 per cent and 60 per cent, respectively.Delhi Capitals have not helped their cause with a variety of surfaces on offer, while conditions have been inconsistent due to unseasonal rains and cooler temperatures in the evening.The afternoon fixture against the Punjab Kings was a flat deck and ended up producing 529 runs. Then, against Royal Challengers Bengaluru, a lively track saw DC bundled for just 75.On Tuesday, a surface that hadn’t been used yet was expected to slow down by DC skipper Axar Patel. By the end, though, he witnessed the opposite and well-set batters were the need of the hour. Where DC barely found any, CSK had Samson and Karthik produce an unbeaten 114-run stand.Delhi Capitals coach Hemang Badani admitted they’ve struggled in most departments and have to adapt better to conditions and pitches.“We do not control the pitch. The surfaces are managed under BCCI guidelines to ensure neutrality,” he said in the post-match media conference.“You play what is given to you. Yes, it has been slightly unpredictable at our home ground. One game had a very high score, and another assisted spin.“But that is the case for all teams. You have to adapt and find ways to win,” he stated.Badani said the need of the hour is to win all four of their remaining matches, with two coming at home. But for that, the inconsistencies need to be addressed.“One day, we bowl well but do not bat well. Another day, we bat well but fall short in another area.“At this level, you need at least 60 to 70 per cent of your players contributing on a given day. That has been missing,” he finished.





















