Few franchises in IPL history can match the legacy of Mumbai Indians. With multiple titles and years of dominance, MI have long been one of the league’s most successful teams. Yet, despite that pedigree, their last IPL trophy came back in 2020.
Heading into the 2026 season, however, there is a growing sense that Mumbai could finally end that drought.
What makes their squad particularly interesting this year is how efficiently they operated at the player auction. Mumbai entered the auction with limited funds but still managed to assemble a remarkably balanced squad, covering almost every base.
Start with the batting, and the depth is immediately striking. Rohit Sharma, Quinton de Kock, Ryan Rickelton, Tilak Varma, Suryakumar Yadav, Hardik Pandya, and Will Jacks form a formidable core. Add to that the power-hitting abilities of Sherfane Rutherford, Naman Dhir, and Mitchell Santner, with Corbin Bosch providing further muscle down the order, and you have a batting lineup capable of overwhelming any bowling attack.
On paper, it might even be the strongest batting unit in the IPL this season.
The bowling attack looks equally impressive. Jasprit Bumrah and Trent Boult remain one of the most feared new-ball combinations in T20 cricket, while Deepak Chahar adds further swing and experience. Pandya and Shardul Thakur offer seam-bowling all-round options, while spin duties could be shared between Santner, Mayank Markande, and Afghanistan’s exciting young spinner Mohammad Ghazanfar.
There is depth everywhere. Even Bosch contributes with the ball, giving Mumbai flexibility depending on conditions.
The only real puzzle for Mumbai’s think tank will be deciding their four overseas players in the starting XI.
One likely combination could see either de Kock or Rickelton opening and keeping wickets, alongside Jacks, Trent Boult, and Santner. However, if conditions favour pace rather than spin, Santner could make way for Corbin Bosch to strengthen the seam attack.
Another option is rotating Rutherford into the XI when extra middle-order firepower is required. In that case, one of the South African wicketkeeper-openers could sit out, with Robin Minz taking over wicketkeeping duties.
The Indian core of the team almost picks itself. Established stars such as Rohit, Suryakumar, Hardik and Bumrah provide stability and leadership, while players like Tilak Varma continue to represent the franchise’s future.
And if Mumbai ever require another seam-bowling all-round option, they also have Raj Bawa waiting in the wings.
All things considered, this MI squad looks extremely well-rounded. If the team performs anywhere close to its potential, stopping them could prove very difficult.
Which raises the big question: could 2026 finally be the year Mumbai reclaim the IPL crown?

















