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#CSK #IPL #Dhoni #misses #Mumbai #Indians">CSK vs MI IPL 2026: MS Dhoni misses out against Mumbai Indians The long wait for MS Dhoni’s return to action continued after the 44-year-old was not named in the starting eleven or in the impact subs at the toss against Mumbai Indians at the MA Chidambaram Stadium on Saturday.
Dhoni hasn’t played a single game this season owing to a calf injury that he picked up before the start of the season.
The CSK management has been non committal about Dhoni’s return date, with batting coach Mike Hussey stating that he’s ‘hopeful’ that Dhoni will be back as soon as possible.
“The primary concern has been his ability to sustain running intensity. He’s been working on his running speeds, which was probably the main concern. From a skill perspective, we’re very confident in his batting and wicketkeeping,” Hussey remarked on the eve of the match against Mumbai Indians.
“It was more about ensuring he can maintain good running power, especially towards the back end of an innings where quick singles and twos are crucial,” Hussey said, before adding that the final call rests with Dhoni.
Head coach Stephen Fleming had revealed earlier that Dhoni had suffered a setback during his recovery, which has delayed his return to action from two weeks to an extended period of time.
“The calf is a tough one. In a warm-up game, he tweaked it again, it’s my understanding. If he takes off and rips the calf again, then he will be gone,” Fleming said after his side’s defeat against Gujarat Titans.
Published on May 02, 2026
The long wait for MS Dhoni’s return to action continued after the 44-year-old was not…
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CSK vs MI Live Score, IPL 2026: Mumbai Indians to take on Chennai Super Kings at Chepauk
CSK vs MI Live Score, IPL 2026: Mumbai Indians to take on Chennai Super Kings at Chepauk Mumbai Indians: Currently struggling in 9th place with only 2 wins from 8 matches. They are looking to bounce back after a loss to CSK earlier this season at Wankhede.
Chennai Super Kings: Sitting in 7th place with 3 wins from 8 matches, currently 6 points away from the top four.
#CSK #Live #Score #IPL #Mumbai #Indians #Chennai #Super #Kings #Chepauk
Mumbai Indians: Currently struggling in 9th place with only 2 wins from 8 matches. They are looking to bounce back after a loss to CSK earlier this season at Wankhede.
Chennai Super Kings: Sitting in 7th place with 3 wins from 8 matches, currently 6 points away from the top four.
Mumbai Indians: Currently struggling in 9th place with only 2 wins from 8 matches. They…
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#CSK #IPL #Headtohead #record #runs #wickets #ahead #Chennai #Super #Kings #Mumbai #Indians">CSK vs MI, IPL 2026: Head-to-head record, most runs, wickets ahead of Chennai Super Kings vs Mumbai Indians
The two most successful teams in the IPL will face off once again as Chennai Super Kings take on Mumbai Indians at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on Saturday, May 2.
CSK hammered MI by 103 runs at the reverse fixture at the Wankhede Stadium just over a week ago. Tonight’s clash assumes a lot of importance as both teams desperately need a win to stay alive in the competition.
MI holds a slight edge in the head to head record. In 40 matches, MI has won 21 times while CSK has won 19 times.
Rohit Sharma, who has been sidelined due to injury with no clarity on his return date, is the highest run scorer in CSK vs MI matches with 881 runs. Dwayne Bravo is the highest wicket taker with 35 scalps.
Here are the complete stats and head-to-head numbers you need to know before the CSK vs MI IPL 2026 match:
CSK vs MI head-to-head record in the IPL
Matches played- 40
MI won- 21
CSK won- 19
Most runs in CSK vs MI matches in the IPL
Player Innings Runs Average Strike Rate HS Rohit Sharma 30 881 33.88 134.29 105* Suresh Raina 30 710 29.58 141.71 83* MS Dhoni 33 679 35.73 134.45 63* Ambati Rayudu 31 658 27.41 127.51 72* Kieron Pollard 23 583 36.43 171.97 87*
Most wickets in CSK vs MI matches in the IPL
Player Innings Wickets Average Economy Rate BBI Dwayne Bravo 22 35 21.05 8.23 4/42 Lasith Malinga 21 31 19.03 7.23 4/37 Harbhajan Singh 26 26 23.61 6.47 5/18 Ravindra Jadeja 28 21 31.09 8.37 3/20 Mohit Sharma 11 15 21.33 8.06 4/14
Published on May 02, 2026
CSK vs MI head-to-head record in the IPL
Matches played- 40
MI won- 21
CSK won- 19
| Player | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike Rate | HS |
| Rohit Sharma | 30 | 881 | 33.88 | 134.29 | 105* |
| Suresh Raina | 30 | 710 | 29.58 | 141.71 | 83* |
| MS Dhoni | 33 | 679 | 35.73 | 134.45 | 63* |
| Ambati Rayudu | 31 | 658 | 27.41 | 127.51 | 72* |
| Kieron Pollard | 23 | 583 | 36.43 | 171.97 | 87* |
| Player | Innings | Wickets | Average | Economy Rate | BBI |
| Dwayne Bravo | 22 | 35 | 21.05 | 8.23 | 4/42 |
| Lasith Malinga | 21 | 31 | 19.03 | 7.23 | 4/37 |
| Harbhajan Singh | 26 | 26 | 23.61 | 6.47 | 5/18 |
| Ravindra Jadeja | 28 | 21 | 31.09 | 8.37 | 3/20 |
| Mohit Sharma | 11 | 15 | 21.33 | 8.06 | 4/14 |
The two most successful teams in the IPL will face off once again as Chennai Super Kings take on Mumbai Indians at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on Saturday, May 2.
CSK hammered MI by 103 runs at the reverse fixture at the Wankhede Stadium just over a week ago. Tonight’s clash assumes a lot of importance as both teams desperately need a win to stay alive in the competition.
MI holds a slight edge in the head to head record. In 40 matches, MI has won 21 times while CSK has won 19 times.
Rohit Sharma, who has been sidelined due to injury with no clarity on his return date, is the highest run scorer in CSK vs MI matches with 881 runs. Dwayne Bravo is the highest wicket taker with 35 scalps.
Here are the complete stats and head-to-head numbers you need to know before the CSK vs MI IPL 2026 match:
CSK vs MI head-to-head record in the IPL
Matches played- 40
MI won- 21
CSK won- 19
Most runs in CSK vs MI matches in the IPL
| Player | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike Rate | HS |
| Rohit Sharma | 30 | 881 | 33.88 | 134.29 | 105* |
| Suresh Raina | 30 | 710 | 29.58 | 141.71 | 83* |
| MS Dhoni | 33 | 679 | 35.73 | 134.45 | 63* |
| Ambati Rayudu | 31 | 658 | 27.41 | 127.51 | 72* |
| Kieron Pollard | 23 | 583 | 36.43 | 171.97 | 87* |
Most wickets in CSK vs MI matches in the IPL
| Player | Innings | Wickets | Average | Economy Rate | BBI |
| Dwayne Bravo | 22 | 35 | 21.05 | 8.23 | 4/42 |
| Lasith Malinga | 21 | 31 | 19.03 | 7.23 | 4/37 |
| Harbhajan Singh | 26 | 26 | 23.61 | 6.47 | 5/18 |
| Ravindra Jadeja | 28 | 21 | 31.09 | 8.37 | 3/20 |
| Mohit Sharma | 11 | 15 | 21.33 | 8.06 | 4/14 |
Published on May 02, 2026
The two most successful teams in the IPL will face off once again as Chennai…
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#CSK #IPL #Struggling #Mumbai #Indians #visits #fellow #reputationburdened #Chennai #Super #Kings #den">CSK vs MI, IPL 2026: Struggling Mumbai Indians visits fellow reputation-burdened Chennai Super Kings’ den
There was a time when this fixture felt less like a league game and more like an annual check on dominance. Two teams turning up to see if the other still remembered how to win.
Now, as Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings arrive at M.A. Chidambaram Stadium, the mood is different. The names remain heavy, but the form is light. Five titles each, yes. But reputations do not bat at No. 3 or bowl in the PowerPlay. CSK sits sixth. MI, ninth.
Memory vs momentum
Their last meeting this season still lingers. At the Wankhede, CSK beat MI by 103 runs, the latter’s heaviest defeat in the IPL. Akeal Hosein, used shrewdly with two overs in the PowerPlay, went around the wicket to left-handers, disrupting angles and rhythm. In tandem with Noor Ahmad, he reduced MI to a kind of batting paralysis.
And yet, MI still leads the IPL head-to-head 21–19. But that number is ageing. It has won only two of the last nine meetings, and just one since the start of 2023.
Mumbai’s confusion: roles without clarity
Mumbai Indians’ decision-making has lacked conviction. Take the handling of 21-year-old Krish Bhagat. Against Gujarat Titans (GT), in a match MI won, his role was clearly defined early: overs four and six, just 10 runs conceded against a strong top order. But that clarity did not carry forward. Against Chennai Super Kings, Bhagat was held back from the PowerPlay entirely and then used at the death, in overs 16 and 20, where he conceded 31. The inconsistency runs deeper. Bhagat didn’t feature at all in the following game against Sunrisers Hyderabad, where Impact Player Shardul Thakur was substituted in at the seven-over mark of the second innings but didn’t bowl a single delivery.
“He’s progressing well and working hard to return. We’re monitoring him daily with the medical team. We’ll see how he trains today and assess how he feels tomorrow before making a decision”Mahela Jayawardene, MI head coach on Rohit Sharma
Across matches, the pattern is less about experimentation and more about indecision, roles changing not by design, but by drift. The churn tells its own story. MI has already used 22 players in eight matches, cycling through all eight overseas options after Will Jacks’s inclusion against Sunrisers Hyderabad. There have been 21 changes to its playing XI across games, a constant search for a winning combination.
It extends to a broader bowling identity. It has conceded at 10.83 an over, the worst in the league, and its 37 wickets are among the lowest returns. Even Jasprit Bumrah, typically MI’s metronome, has just two wickets in eight games. The response has been telling. Trent Boult began as the new-ball spearhead, but a lack of PowerPlay wickets has forced a rethink. Bumrah has increasingly been used upfront.
CSK’s method: control, but at a cost?
If Mumbai’s issue is uncertainty, Chennai’s might be over-calibration. It has used 19 players, rotated six overseas options, and made 10 changes to the XI.
Its use of the Impact Player has been instructive, and occasionally questionable. Against GT, after losing two early wickets, they brought in Sarfaraz Khan as batting reinforcement, effectively sacrificing the option of a specialist bowler like Mukesh Choudhary later. On a mixed-soil surface with variable bounce, CSK finished with 158 for 7.
This raises a broader question: is CSK reacting too early, rather than trusting its base combination?
“ In many ways, this is quite a new team with several new players. We wanted to expose some young talent to game situations. After losing the first three matches, we had to make adjustments. Some changes were self-caused, others were due to injuries, which are beyond our control. Ideally, we’d like to settle on an XI or XII we’re comfortable with and let those players grow into their roles. Hopefully, once we build some momentum and string together wins, we’ll have the confidence to stick with a more consistent lineup”Michael Hussey, CSK batting coach on frequent changes to the XI
At Chepauk, CSK’s template has otherwise been consistent. Bat first, build, and stretch. Before the GT game, it had posted 209, 212 and 192 in three home matches, all batting first.
There is, however, a flicker of reassurance. Ruturaj Gaikwad’s return to form against Gujarat Titans, his first fifty in 11 IPL innings, offers CSK a sliver of good news.
Match-up to watch
Mumbai Indians has brought in Keshav Maharaj after Mitchell Santner’s shoulder injury ruled him out of IPL 2026. On paper, it’s a logical swap. Maharaj offers control through the middle overs and, against a Chennai Super Kings top order heavy on right-handers, gives MI a left-arm orthodox option to dictate angles.
But the matchup isn’t as straightforward as it seems. If Shivam Dube, the only left-hander in CSK’s top eight, is promoted up the order, MI faces a dilemma: hold Maharaj back or risk exposing him when the game is accelerating. Add Dewald Brevis into that middle order, and CSK still has enough intent to disrupt spin late, forcing MI to rethink how and when it deploys Maharaj.
Published on May 01, 2026
“He’s progressing well and working hard to return. We’re monitoring him daily with the medical team. We’ll see how he trains today and assess how he feels tomorrow before making a decision”Mahela Jayawardene, MI head coach on Rohit Sharma
“ In many ways, this is quite a new team with several new players. We wanted to expose some young talent to game situations. After losing the first three matches, we had to make adjustments. Some changes were self-caused, others were due to injuries, which are beyond our control. Ideally, we’d like to settle on an XI or XII we’re comfortable with and let those players grow into their roles. Hopefully, once we build some momentum and string together wins, we’ll have the confidence to stick with a more consistent lineup”Michael Hussey, CSK batting coach on frequent changes to the XI
There was a time when this fixture felt less like a league game and more like an annual check on dominance. Two teams turning up to see if the other still remembered how to win.
Now, as Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings arrive at M.A. Chidambaram Stadium, the mood is different. The names remain heavy, but the form is light. Five titles each, yes. But reputations do not bat at No. 3 or bowl in the PowerPlay. CSK sits sixth. MI, ninth.
Memory vs momentum
Their last meeting this season still lingers. At the Wankhede, CSK beat MI by 103 runs, the latter’s heaviest defeat in the IPL. Akeal Hosein, used shrewdly with two overs in the PowerPlay, went around the wicket to left-handers, disrupting angles and rhythm. In tandem with Noor Ahmad, he reduced MI to a kind of batting paralysis.
And yet, MI still leads the IPL head-to-head 21–19. But that number is ageing. It has won only two of the last nine meetings, and just one since the start of 2023.
Mumbai’s confusion: roles without clarity
Mumbai Indians’ decision-making has lacked conviction. Take the handling of 21-year-old Krish Bhagat. Against Gujarat Titans (GT), in a match MI won, his role was clearly defined early: overs four and six, just 10 runs conceded against a strong top order. But that clarity did not carry forward. Against Chennai Super Kings, Bhagat was held back from the PowerPlay entirely and then used at the death, in overs 16 and 20, where he conceded 31. The inconsistency runs deeper. Bhagat didn’t feature at all in the following game against Sunrisers Hyderabad, where Impact Player Shardul Thakur was substituted in at the seven-over mark of the second innings but didn’t bowl a single delivery.
“He’s progressing well and working hard to return. We’re monitoring him daily with the medical team. We’ll see how he trains today and assess how he feels tomorrow before making a decision”Mahela Jayawardene, MI head coach on Rohit Sharma
Across matches, the pattern is less about experimentation and more about indecision, roles changing not by design, but by drift. The churn tells its own story. MI has already used 22 players in eight matches, cycling through all eight overseas options after Will Jacks’s inclusion against Sunrisers Hyderabad. There have been 21 changes to its playing XI across games, a constant search for a winning combination.
It extends to a broader bowling identity. It has conceded at 10.83 an over, the worst in the league, and its 37 wickets are among the lowest returns. Even Jasprit Bumrah, typically MI’s metronome, has just two wickets in eight games. The response has been telling. Trent Boult began as the new-ball spearhead, but a lack of PowerPlay wickets has forced a rethink. Bumrah has increasingly been used upfront.
CSK’s method: control, but at a cost?
If Mumbai’s issue is uncertainty, Chennai’s might be over-calibration. It has used 19 players, rotated six overseas options, and made 10 changes to the XI.
Its use of the Impact Player has been instructive, and occasionally questionable. Against GT, after losing two early wickets, they brought in Sarfaraz Khan as batting reinforcement, effectively sacrificing the option of a specialist bowler like Mukesh Choudhary later. On a mixed-soil surface with variable bounce, CSK finished with 158 for 7.
This raises a broader question: is CSK reacting too early, rather than trusting its base combination?
“ In many ways, this is quite a new team with several new players. We wanted to expose some young talent to game situations. After losing the first three matches, we had to make adjustments. Some changes were self-caused, others were due to injuries, which are beyond our control. Ideally, we’d like to settle on an XI or XII we’re comfortable with and let those players grow into their roles. Hopefully, once we build some momentum and string together wins, we’ll have the confidence to stick with a more consistent lineup”Michael Hussey, CSK batting coach on frequent changes to the XI
At Chepauk, CSK’s template has otherwise been consistent. Bat first, build, and stretch. Before the GT game, it had posted 209, 212 and 192 in three home matches, all batting first.
There is, however, a flicker of reassurance. Ruturaj Gaikwad’s return to form against Gujarat Titans, his first fifty in 11 IPL innings, offers CSK a sliver of good news.
Match-up to watch
Mumbai Indians has brought in Keshav Maharaj after Mitchell Santner’s shoulder injury ruled him out of IPL 2026. On paper, it’s a logical swap. Maharaj offers control through the middle overs and, against a Chennai Super Kings top order heavy on right-handers, gives MI a left-arm orthodox option to dictate angles.
But the matchup isn’t as straightforward as it seems. If Shivam Dube, the only left-hander in CSK’s top eight, is promoted up the order, MI faces a dilemma: hold Maharaj back or risk exposing him when the game is accelerating. Add Dewald Brevis into that middle order, and CSK still has enough intent to disrupt spin late, forcing MI to rethink how and when it deploys Maharaj.
Published on May 01, 2026
There was a time when this fixture felt less like a league game and more…