
Samira Vishwas
Tezzbuzz|26-10-2025
The Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) demonstrated flashes of brilliance in the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025maintaining consistency but ultimately falling short of the playoff threshold, finishing seventh in the league stage.
This performance was an improvement on their previous season’s early momentum, re-emphasizing their strategy of building around a strong core of proven Indian international players. While they struggled to find the decisive knockout punch in crucial games, their ability to remain competitive throughout the tournament showcased a solid blueprint for future success centered on stability and a robust middle order.
This campaign was powered by several stellar individual efforts. Captain Rishabh Pant led the batting line-up with characteristic composure alongside Mitchell Marshonce again accumulating over maximum and anchoring the innings reliably. This stability was complemented by the Aiden Markramwho delivered critical performances with both bat and ball, often controlling the middle overs with tight spin. On the bowling side, young leg-spinner Digvesh Rathi was highly effective, providing genuine wicket-taking threat and becoming the team’s leading wicket-taker, ensuring the team always had a point of attack in the crucial middle overs.
Despite showing good form and consistency in 2025, LSG’s approach to squad building remains burdened by a few high-value contracts that did not translate into proportional on-field returns. The franchise needs to prioritize financial efficiency and streamline their roster to free up significant capital, ensuring they can target specialist, high-impact replacements at the IPL 2026 mini-auction.
A critical area demanding restructuring is the domestic pace department, where a significant investment was made in an experienced, high-priced pacer whose workload and wicket count were severely limited. This capital could be better deployed to acquire a high-impact, specialist death-bowling option or a proven power-hitter. Additionally, the team carried a couple of overseas players whose limited utility or failure to secure a consistent starting spot represents blocked funds. These players, who were often bench-warmers despite sizable contracts, must be released to maximize the available purse for acquiring value-for-money talent, ensuring the 2026 squad is both competitive and economically sound.
1. Avesh Khan (Pacer)
Avesh Khan was retained/acquired for a significant sum to be a domestic pace spearhead, but his performance in IPL 2025 was inconsistent, yielding only 13 wickets across 13 matches at a high economy rate exceeding 10.29. While he possesses talent, his high contract value demands more reliability in both the powerplay and death overs. Releasing Avesh will free up a massive INR 10 Cr from the purse, allowing LSG to target a proven, economical Indian fast bowler or reinvest the capital into a high-impact finisher.
2. M. Siddharth (Bowler)

M. Siddharth is a domestic reserve spinner who offers a similar skill set to others in the LSG squad (such as M. Siddharth’s style). While his contract is low, the domestic spin contingent already features established stars like Ravi Bishnoi and Krunal Pandya. Retaining an additional low-cost reserve whose role is redundant and unlikely to secure game time is an inefficient use of a domestic slot. Releasing him allows LSG to target a more versatile uncapped domestic player who offers batting utility or a different pace option.
3. Shamar Joseph (Overseas Pacer)

Shamar Joseph was signed as an expensive replacement mid-season, but he was subsequently unavailable or deemed unfit for playing XI selection, featuring in zero matches. While his contract is not astronomical, retaining an overseas player who provided zero on-field contribution and was not part of the initial core is unnecessary. Releasing him is a straightforward roster clean-up that frees up both an overseas slot and valuable capital for the auction, reinforcing the focus on fit, high-impact contributors.
4. Shardul Thakur (All-Rounder)

Shardul Thakur was acquired for a massive sum to be a pace-bowling all-rounder, but his performance in IPL 2025 often lacked the consistent breakthrough wickets and economical bowling demanded by his price tag. For a contract value over INR 2 Crthe team needs a more reliable performer who can deliver both consistent death bowling and late-innings acceleration with the bat. Releasing Shardul would free up a significant portion of the purse for a high-impact overseas all-rounder or a specialist Indian pacer.
5. William O’Rourke (Bowler)

William O’Rourke was acquired at a decent price as an exciting overseas pace prospect. However, using him means spending a crucial overseas slot on a player who is largely untested in Indian conditions and whose limited appearances elsewhere showed a high economy rate. LSG needs to prioritize proven, high-impact foreign players for their limited slots. Retaining an expensive overseas pacer whose role is uncertain and output risky is financially inefficient. Releasing O’Rourke provides flexible capital and opens an overseas slot.




