
Delhi Capitals coach Hemang Badani reveals challenges with the team's unpredictable home pitches in IPL 2026. The team has only secured one win out of five home games at the Arun Jaitley Stadium.
Hemang Badani Axar Patel
"BCCI mandate": DC coach Hemang Badani drops truth bomb on Delhi’s 'unpredictable' pitches in IPL 2026 originally appeared on Cricket News. Add Cricket News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Delhi Capitals head coach Hemang Badani has acknowledged that his side have simply not been able to figure out what kind of pitch they will be greeted with each time they return to the Arun Jaitley Stadium in IPL 2026.
For a team desperately chasing a playoff spot, losing four of five matches on your own turf is difficult to explain away.
The range of surfaces Delhi have encountered at home this season borders on the surreal. Against Punjab Kings, they batted on a flat, true deck and still lost, despite posting 264 runs.
Two days later, against Royal Challengers Bengaluru, the pitch moved sharply off the seam. Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Josh Hazlewood tore through the Delhi batting lineup, dismissing them for a humiliating 75 in just over 16 overs.
Hemang Badani stated that the Delhi Capitals have struggled to adapt to their unpredictable home pitches.
Delhi Capitals have won just one of their five home games at the Arun Jaitley Stadium in IPL 2026.
Delhi Capitals are facing challenges, including poor form from Kuldeep Yadav and difficulties with their home pitches.
The BCCI mandate has implications for team strategies, particularly in adapting to the unpredictable nature of their home pitches.

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Then on Tuesday against Chennai Super Kings, they ran into something altogether different again: a slow, turning surface where the ball gripped and stopped, bringing CSK's spinners Akeal Hosein and Noor Ahmad directly into the game.
Delhi won the toss, chose to bat, hoping conditions would deteriorate for the team chasing, and were proven completely wrong as Sanju Samson guided CSK home with eight wickets in hand.
Badani stated that the BCCI holds complete authority over pitch preparation across all venues during the IPL, deliberately preventing home teams from shaping surfaces to suit their strengths
"We don't have any control over the surfaces," Badani said. "As much as one would like to think that we are in control of the surface that we want to play on, there is a clear mandate from the BCCI that they look after the surfaces and they are the ones who ensure that there's no local side that gets benefit out of the surfaces.
"So you play what is presented to you. And yes, it's been a bit of an up-and-down curve for us to understand what we are going to get at Delhi, which is our home. Seventy [75] one game, one game was 265. Again, this was a surface which spun," Badani said. "But there's little control that any side has on the surface. It's not about us. I think the whole comp itself is quite neutral that way. Every side has to find a way to win those games. But yeah, ideally you want to have some consistency."
Delhi currently sit seventh in the table after ten matches. A defeat to Kolkata Knight Riders on Friday could push them down to eighth, further narrowing their already thin margin for error in the race for a top-four finish.
Badani is not wrong that the BCCI controls pitch preparation, and there is genuine merit in arguing that extreme variation makes planning harder.
But other teams face the same conditions across the country, and most find a way to adapt. The real issue for Delhi is that their squad lacks the flexibility to handle contrasting surfaces, their key bowlers are out of form, and their selection logic has been questioned repeatedly.
Blaming the pitch is easier than fixing those problems, but only the latter will keep DC's season alive.
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