Lucknow Super Giants and Rajasthan Royals head into Wednesday night’s IPL 2026 meeting in Lucknow with the same basic need: stop the drift before it turns into something bigger. The match, scheduled for April 22 at the Ekana Stadium, arrives with LSG down in ninth place on four points from six games, while RR are still third with eight points from six but suddenly looking a lot less comfortable after back-to-back defeats.
For Lucknow, the mood is more urgent. Rishabh Pant’s side has dropped three in a row, and the most recent one was ugly. Punjab Kings piled up 254 for 7 — the highest total of the season so far — before handing LSG a 54-run defeat. That result exposed just about everything that has been bothering them lately: loose bowling, uncertainty in the batting order, and a side that still doesn’t quite look settled six matches in.
There are individual worries too, and they’re not small ones. Mitchell Marsh has managed starts without really cashing in, Pant hasn’t found steady rhythm, and Nicholas Pooran’s lean run has only added to the sense that Lucknow are searching for answers on the fly. Even the tactical tweaks haven’t really landed; the attempt to push Ayush Badoni up top didn’t solve much. About the only clear bright note recently has been Prince Yadav, who stood out in the Punjab game while the rest of the attack took punishment.
Rajasthan’s situation is different, but it isn’t exactly calm either. They ripped through their first four matches, beating Chennai, Gujarat, Mumbai and Bengaluru, and looked like one of the early teams to beat. Then came the wobble: a 57-run loss to Sunrisers Hyderabad followed by a four-wicket defeat to Kolkata Knight Riders. The points cushion is still there, which matters, but the ease that marked their opening stretch has started to fade.
What’s nagging RR most is the middle order. The top has done a fair bit of heavy lifting, with Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi repeatedly giving them brisk starts, but the dependence on that opening pair is beginning to show. Recent coverage around the team has pointed squarely at the form of skipper Riyan Parag and the lack of fluency in the middle overs. Against a Lucknow side that has problems of its own, Rajasthan will still back themselves — but not without some nervous glances at that soft middle.
So this game has that slightly edgy, mid-season feel about it. RR are higher on the table, yes, but they need to prove the last two losses were just a dip. LSG, meanwhile, are at the point where another defeat would make the table look harsh and the noise around the side even harsher. At home, under pressure, and short on momentum, Lucknow don’t really have the luxury of easing into this one. Rajasthan don’t either.
