SRH Conquer Wankhede in a Night of Stunning Strokeplay
Sunrisers Hyderabad chase down 244 with 8 balls to spare as Travis Head blazes a 30-ball 76 and Klaasen seals the deal with a brutal unbeaten fifty
Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai | IPL 2026, Match 41 | April 29, 2026

A Wankhede night that already felt out of control for Mumbai Indians got completely beyond them in the span of four extraordinary overs. Sunrisers Hyderabad, chasing a target that seemed like a genuine challenge at 244, crossed the line in 18.4 overs with six wickets in hand, winning by a margin that flattered their dominance even further. The final scoreline — 249/4 — tells you everything about the utter inadequacy of MI’s bowling on a flat, true surface.
200+ Chases in IPL Becoming the New Normal: IPL 2026 Signals a Fearless New Era of Batting Dominance
For all the brilliance Ryan Rickelton had shown earlier with the bat, the night belonged to SRH’s foreign contingent. Travis Head’s 76 off 30 balls was a hurricane in human form. Heinrich Klaasen then strode in and finished the job with a ruthlessness that left the crowd silent.
Rickelton’s masterclass sets the tone
Mumbai Indians won the toss and elected to bat, and for a long time it looked like the right call — or at least, it looked like Rickelton’s call. The South African wicketkeeper-batter was in the sort of touch that defies analysis. He reached his half-century off just 23 balls and then kept accelerating, his innings growing in audacity with every over. By the time he crossed a hundred — off 44 balls, with eight fours and seven sixes — Wankhede was witnessing one of the more complete T20 innings of this IPL season.
His opening partner Will Jacks gave him the perfect platform, smashing 46 off 22 to help the pair put on 93 for the first wicket inside eight overs. When Jacks fell to Nitish Kumar Reddy, the platform was already enormous. Hardik Pandya chipped in with a rapid 31 off 15 in the back end, and though wickets tumbled at regular intervals, Rickelton remained unbeaten on 123 off 55 — a supreme individual performance that took MI to 243/5.
The SRH bowlers struggled to contain the carnage. Eshan Malinga was the pick of the attack with figures of 1/29 from four overs, the only economical spell on show. Pat Cummins, wicketless, conceded 39, while Harsh Dubey was carted for 50 off just three. It felt, at the innings break, like it might be enough.
Head detonates the powerplay
It was not enough. Not remotely close.
Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head came out with the intent of a team that doesn’t believe in chase psychology. Abhishek was busy and aggressive, but Head was on a different plane. Sixes flew into the stands. MI’s bowlers — including the usually lethal Jasprit Bumrah — had no answers. Head reached his half-century off just 20 balls and the SRH opening partnership had already put on a hundred by the end of the eighth over.
Abhishek fell to Ghazanfar for 45 with the score at 129, and in the very next ball, Ishan Kishan was bowled for a golden duck — also by Ghazanfar, who had a genuine chance of changing the game. At 129/2 after back-to-back wickets, MI had a sliver of hope. It lasted one ball. Head skied one to Will Jacks off Pandya the very next over and was dismissed for 76, leaving with the kind of stat line — 8 sixes, strike rate 253.33 — that tends to live in the memory.
Klaasen and Arora seal it in style
At 133/3 in the tenth over, SRH still needed 111 runs from 61 balls. Klaasen and Nitish Kumar Reddy steadied briefly before Nitish was caught for 21. That brought Salil Arora in, and what followed was a partnership that ended any lingering MI hope. Klaasen was majestic — measured in a way Head was not, but equally destructive. His fifty came off 22 balls and he finished on an unbeaten 65 off 30. Arora, arriving at the death, was even more spectacular in his brief cameo: 30 off 10 balls, with three sixes. The final over was never needed.
Bumrah’s four overs went for 54 — a rare off night for the world’s best bowler, who simply had no surface to grip on. Ghazanfar took 2/51 and was genuinely the only MI bowler to trouble SRH batters with any consistency.
The story in numbers
SRH’s chase was built on astonishing powerplay aggression — 92 runs without loss in the first six overs — and then sheer individual brilliance thereafter. The run rate required never dipped low enough for MI to bowl with any kind of confidence. Three SRH batters hit at a strike rate above 200. The team run rate across the chase was 13.33.
- Klaasen took home the Player of the Match award for his innings plus two catches behind the stumps. Cricinfo’s MVP, however, was Travis Head — whose 30-ball 76 effectively made the contest a non-contest before Klaasen even got going.https://www.sunrisershyderabad.in/
The result moves SRH up to third on the IPL points table, while MI remain rooted at ninth, their playoff hopes growing dimmer with each passing round.
Points: SRH 2, MI 0 · Venue: Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai · Toss: Mumbai Indians (elected to bat) · Match Referee: Javagal Srinath