Sun Sets For Suryakumar Yadav: Why BCCI's Captaincy Sacking Is Unjust
Suryakumar Yadav has been sacked as India's T20I captain and dropped from the squad altogether, despite leading the nation to a T20 World Cup title in his last match.
- Roddur Mookherjee
- Updated: June 07, 2026 06:47 am IST
- Suryakumar Yadav has been axed as India's T20I captain despite leading the country to a T20 World Cup title
- Suryakumar holds the record for the best win percentage of any Indian captain in T20Is, making his axing harsh
- The 35-year-old redefined Indian cricket with the bat, and deserved a longer rope given his leadership legacy
The Suryakumar Yadav-era of Indian T20 cricket is over, as it stands. The man who made his India debut at the age of 30, took a match-winning catch in a T20 World Cup final and led India to victory in another T20 World Cup final, has been unceremoniously shown the door at the age of 35. While few can doubt Shreyas Iyer's captaincy credentials, and more importantly his excellent form, the total erasure of Suryakumar Yadav from the T20I setup appears quite harsh.
Unbeaten As Captain
Suryakumar Yadav has done very little wrong when it comes to his captaincy of India in T20I cricket. He was the surprise captain-elect after Rohit Sharma's retirement, as Gautam Gambhir chose his old KKR vice-captain over the injury-prone Hardik Pandya. And SKY took the role like a duck to water.
His stats speak for themselves - 42 wins in 52 matches, with a win percentage of 80.7, which is the highest of any captain in India's T20I history (minimum 10 matches led). Suryakumar did not lose a single T20I series as skipper, and ultimately delivered the T20 World Cup 2026 title under the immense pressure of a home World Cup.
Shreyas Iyer's case is excellent. He led his IPL franchise to two finals in successive years, and has grown into a dangerous middle-order batter in T20s. But Suryakumar's CV shows a T20 World Cup title as India captain. Is there a better case to be made than that?
Suryakumar The Batter Deserved More Time
It is hard to deny that Suryakumar Yadav has looked a shadow of the batter he was in the last few months. Suryakumar's form problems have been well-documented right from the Asia Cup 2025, but it was really a sub-par IPL 2026 that sealed the deal.
Even then, Suryakumar played a match-winning 84* off 49 in India's first T20 World Cup 2026 game against USA, in a game where every other batter had seemingly forgotten how to bat. He had singlehandedly ensured that India's World Cup campaign did not get off to the worst-possible start.
Suryakumar also hit a fifty in his final match of IPL 2026, showing that class is permanent.
At his best, Suryakumar Yadav redefined India's T20I batting, becoming the first Indian batter to truly bat in the dynamic and unorthodox fashion that is prevalent in the modern game. But even at his worst, Suryakumar showed he could still be a game-changer with the bat.
Given this legacy, Suryakumar perhaps deserved a longer rope as a batter alone.
Great Relationship With Gambhir
"A phenomenal leader of men" - that's the phrase Gautam Gambhir used to describe Suryakumar Yadav ahead of the T20 World Cup 2026. And it adds to the confusion of Suryakumar's total omission.
Gambhir's frosty relationship with the likes of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma in Tests and ODIs have been reported multiple times during his tenure as head coach. But those issues have largely stayed away in T20Is, where Gambhir and Suryakumar have worked in tandem to instill an aggressive brand of cricket within the Indian team.
"The way he relates to the players, the way he talks to players, the way he spends time with players, how much he is relaxed on the field. Sometimes as coach, you can think about a lot of other things because you know he is going to keep the atmosphere pretty much calm that any coach can dream of," Gambhir had said, praising Suryakumar's leadership.
Now these shoes will have to be filled all over again.
Conclusion
Were Suryakumar Yadav to be just a batter, his form wouldn't leave much of a case to retain him. But his contribution to Indian T20 cricket goes far beyond his runs with the bat.
As a captain, SKY possibly couldn't have done more, and he deserved far more than being the first-ever captain to be sacked after winning a major ICC trophy.