Lucknow Super Giants and Kolkata Knight Riders go into Sunday’s IPL 2026 clash in Lucknow with almost no room left for drift. LSG are ninth on the table with 4 points from 7 matches and a net run rate of -1.277, while KKR sit last with 3 points from 7 games and an NRR of -0.879. That makes this less a mid-season fixture and more a rescue job for two teams whose campaigns have been wobbling for weeks.
For Kolkata, the big talking point is Matheesha Pathirana. The Sri Lankan quick has already been cleared by Sri Lanka Cricket and granted the NOC to join KKR after missing the early part of the season, a delay linked to a calf strain suffered during the T20 World Cup earlier this year. He was one of KKR’s marquee buys at the auction, signed for INR 18 crore, so even the possibility of him being available changes the feel around their bowling group. Suddenly, a side that has looked thin at the death has a bit of menace again.
That matters because KKR has spent most of this season chasing the game. Their only win so far came against Rajasthan Royals on April 19, when Varun Chakravarthy, Sunil Narine, and the lower middle order dragged them over the line in a four-wicket result that finally gave Ajinkya Rahane’s side something to breathe about. Before that, it had been a flat, frustrating run. One win doesn’t erase all of it, obviously, but it does at least give them a pulse.
Lucknow, though, is in even stranger shape. They began brightly enough, including a last-ball three-wicket win over this same KKR side on April 9, but since then they’ve lost four straight. The latest one stung. Rajasthan Royals defended just 159 in Lucknow and bowled LSG out for 119, handing them a 40-run defeat and their third consecutive loss at home. After that game, captain Rishabh Pant admitted the obvious: the batting hasn’t been good enough.
That’s the uneasy subplot here. Pant and Mitchell Marsh remain the headline names in this batting order, and Nicholas Pooran can wreck a chase in half an hour, but LSG have still looked brittle under pressure. The recent-form markers are rough reading: LSG’s sequence is W-L-L-L-L-L, while KKR’s has at least improved a touch after that Rajasthan result. Even in a match between the bottom two, momentum is not quite equal. Kolkata arrives with a small spark; Lucknow arrives still trying to explain another collapse.
There is also the rivalry trend, and LSG will take some comfort from that. They have won five of the seven meetings between these sides, including this season’s earlier contest at Eden Gardens. But head-to-head numbers only go so far when both teams are leaking confidence. In truth, the match may come down to who handles the surface better. Ekana has a reputation for being slower and more gripping than many IPL venues, and that tends to drag spinners and change-of-pace bowlers into the game. KKR won their previous match on a surface that suited spin; that part won’t worry them.
The conditions should be punishing in another sense, too. Forecast data for Lucknow on Sunday shows hazy, very hot weather through the evening, with temperatures around 41°C at 7 p.m. local time and still near 38°C by 9 p.m. It won’t decide the match on its own, but it adds another layer to an already scrappy contest. Sharp fielding, clear thinking and calm finishing can get harder in that kind of heat.
So yes, Pathirana is the headline boost. But the real story is broader than one fast bowler returning. KKR are trying to turn one win into a revival. LSG are trying to stop their season from sliding into the ditch. When No. 10 meets No. 9, it rarely looks glamorous. Still, these are often the games that tell you who has any nerve left.
