Where they finished
Position on table: Bottom of the ten-team pack, with eight points
Wins: Four
Losses: Ten
Sunrisers Hyderabad came into IPL 2023 as one of the more balanced-looking teams, but things just didn't fall into place for them. They lost their first two games and won the next two, but three losses on the bounce thereon caused their campaign to nosedive quickly, and it never looked up after that. This was the third straight season that SRH have failed to get past the league stage and the second time in three years that they have finished bottom.
The Good - Klaasen and Markande make a mark
In an otherwise bleak season, Heinrich Klaasen and Mayank Markande were the standout performers for SRH. Both players were given an extended run and they made it count.
Markande manned the middle overs for SRH, picking up 11 of his 12 wickets in that phase, and was easily the team's best spinner. He finished with an economy rate of 7.89, the second-best for his side (minimum 50 balls bowled) behind Mayank Dagar, and was the second-highest wicket-taker behind Bhuvneshwar Kumar.
Klaasen almost single-handedly carried SRH's batting this season. He packed a punch whenever he came out to bat and in every phase. Klaasen was SRH's leading run-scorer by some distance and one of the few positives to come out of the team's disappointing batting show this season.
"Once you identify a talent, back it and have consistency with selection"
The Bad - an unsettled unit
"He's a player with the X-factor, bowls at 150kph, but I don't really know what's happening behind the scenes." That was captain Aiden Markram's reply on May 18 regarding Umran Malik's prolonged absence from the playing XI, and it suggested that all wasn't well in the SRH camp. It seemed so all through the season.
SRH failed to zero in on a settled unit, both on the batting and bowling fronts. They fielded 23 players in all - joint-most for any team - with very few getting a long run. And, it started right at the top. SRH used seven opening combinations, second only to Kolkata Knight Riders, with no pair getting more than four games.
Barring Klaasen, SRH did not have a single batter in the top 30 of the run-getters' list and not one bowler managed to get into the top ten of the wicket-takers' list either. Washington Sundar being ruled out with a hamstring injury midway through the season also threw a spanner in SRH's works.
Another reason behind SRH's weak season was their key batters not turning up. They splurged a total of INR 21.50 crore on Harry Brook and Mayank Agarwal, but both had mediocre seasons - really, just one innings of substance each.
Brook, apart from the century against KKR did not cross 30 even once and scored three ducks. He was also benched for a couple of games. Agarwal crossed fifty just once this season - in the final league game - and averaged just 27.0 with a strike rate of 128.57. Both batters were constantly shuffled around in the batting order, which might not have helped.
In his first year as captain, Markram left a lot to be desired. But was he in charge? Some of the selection calls led to former SRH head coach Tom Moody saying that Markram might have had "very little say on selection".
Poll
Top performer - Heinrich Klaasen
Klaasen stood head and shoulders above anyone in the team - his takedown of spin will remain one of the highlights of IPL 2023. Klaasen finished with 448 runs in 11 innings, striking at 177.07, with two fifties and a century. He struck at 191.30 against spin - the second-best strike rate for any batter who has faced a minimum of 50 balls this season - and was equally formidable against pace.
The Highlights
With his 104 against RCB, Klaasen became the fourth SRH batter to score a century in the IPL behind David Warner (twice), Jonny Bairstow and Harry Brook.
For all their batting frailties, SRH were one of only two teams to have two centurions this season.
Against Rajasthan Royals, SRH successfully chased down a target in excess of 200 for the first time in the IPL. It was also the joint-third-highest chase in IPL history.