DC vs MI Match Result
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Delhi Capitals defeated Mumbai Indians by 6 wickets in Match 8 of IPL 2026 at the Arun Jaitley Stadium, chasing 163 with 11 balls to spare. The scoreboard says 164/4 in 18.1 overs, but the real story was Sameer Rizvi’s astonishing 90 off 51 balls on a surface where timing was not easy and where Mumbai’s innings had repeatedly stalled.
Mumbai had enough experience at the crease to believe 162/6 could be defended. Suryakumar Yadav made 51 off 36, Rohit Sharma added 35 off 26, and Naman Dhir chipped in late with 28. But Delhi’s bowling kept the innings under control for long stretches, especially after Mukesh Kumar’s early burst and the squeeze applied through the middle overs by Axar Patel and Vipraj Nigam.
Delhi’s chase began in ugly fashion. KL Rahul fell for 1 in the first over, Nitish Rana was run out for 0 by a sharp Jasprit Bumrah direct hit, and the hosts were suddenly 2/2. That should have been Mumbai’s opening. Instead, Pathum Nissanka and Rizvi rebuilt, and once Rizvi settled in, the match flipped hard toward Delhi.
Rizvi’s innings was not just quick. It was match-defining in terms of control. He hit 7 fours and 7 sixes, reached his fifty in 32 balls, and handled both pace and spin cleanly on a two-paced deck. By the time he fell for 90, Delhi were already in command, and David Miller with Tristan Stubbs closed the game without drama.
The core match figures below are compiled from the official IPL report, Cricbuzz, and Reuters.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Match | Delhi Capitals vs Mumbai Indians, Match 8, IPL 2026 |
| Venue | Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi |
| Result | Delhi Capitals won by 6 wickets |
| MI Total | 162/6 in 20 overs |
| DC Total | 164/4 in 18.1 overs |
| Player of the Match | Sameer Rizvi |
| Best MI batter | Suryakumar Yadav – 51 (36) |
| Best DC batter | Sameer Rizvi – 90 (51) |
| Key support knock | Pathum Nissanka – 44 (30) |
| Key bowling spell | Mukesh Kumar – 2/26 |
Mumbai’s innings never fully accelerated. Mukesh Kumar removed Ryan Rickelton and Tilak Varma early to leave MI at 18/2, and the powerplay closed at a modest 41/2. Rohit Sharma then tried to release pressure, while Suryakumar Yadav took charge of the middle phase with a measured half-century. Yet Delhi kept dragging the innings back with disciplined lengths and tighter fields.
The critical phase came after Mumbai had recovered to 69/2. Delhi squeezed them to 86/4, which disrupted the launch point completely. Suryakumar’s dismissal to Lungi Ngidi hurt, and although Naman Dhir and Corbin Bosch pushed at the death, 162 looked competitive rather than imposing. Reuters noted that Mumbai hit only four sixes in the entire innings, which reflected both the surface and Delhi’s control.
That reading was later echoed by stand-in captain Suryakumar Yadav, who said Mumbai were around 15–20 runs short and felt 180–185 would have been a better total. He also admitted that his own dismissal and Naman Dhir’s wicket came at the wrong time.
A chase of 163 became difficult immediately when Deepak Chahar dismissed KL Rahul and Bumrah’s direct hit removed Nitish Rana. At 2/2, Mumbai had both scoreboard pressure and emotional momentum. That was the stage where Delhi needed calm batting, not panic.
Pathum Nissanka provided exactly that. His 44 off 30 prevented the required rate from spiraling and also changed the geometry of the chase by taking on spin. That allowed Rizvi to build without forcing from ball one. Once both batters began to find the boundary, Mumbai lost control of the middle overs.
Then the match became Rizvi’s stage. He attacked the change bowlers, took 20 off one Corbin Bosch over, and also struck Mayank Markande for back-to-back sixes. Cricbuzz’s post-match breakdown underlined how complete the knock was: 63 runs off 33 balls against pace and 27 off 18 against spin. This was not random hitting. It was a high-quality chase innings built on reading pace, length, and phase pressure.
Even Rizvi’s dismissal did not reopen the game. He fell 10 short of a century, but by then Delhi only needed finishing touches. David Miller stayed unbeaten on 21 and sealed the chase in the 19th over.
These standout numbers are taken from the official IPL report, Cricbuzz, and Reuters coverage.
| Player | Team | Performance | Why It Mattered |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sameer Rizvi | DC | 90 (51), 7×4, 7×6 | Won the chase after DC had slipped to 2/2 |
| Pathum Nissanka | DC | 44 (30) | Stabilized the innings and kept the chase alive |
| David Miller | DC | 21* | Finished the match cleanly |
| Mukesh Kumar | DC | 2/26 | Broke MI early and shaped the innings |
| Suryakumar Yadav | MI | 51 (36) | Anchored MI’s middle overs |
| Rohit Sharma | MI | 35 (26) | Briefly gave MI momentum after the early losses |
| Naman Dhir | MI | 28 | Helped MI reach a defendable-looking total |
This was not a straightforward batting beauty. Reuters described it as a slow track where timing was tricky and stroke-making risky, and Mumbai’s innings reflected that. What separates Delhi from Mumbai in this match is that Delhi adapted better in the chase than Mumbai did while setting the score.
Mumbai batted in patches. Delhi batted with a clearer plan once the early damage was absorbed. Nissanka neutralized the pressure, Rizvi attacked the right bowlers, and Miller cleaned up. That sequence matters. It shows Delhi are not relying on one style of batting only. They can survive collapse, rebuild, and then overrun a target.
Another important layer is role clarity. Cricbuzz highlighted Rizvi’s recent run of 58*, 70*, and now 90, while also noting that his 90 is the third-highest score by an Impact Player in IPL history. That turns this from a one-off cameo into an emerging season trend.
Delhi Capitals did not just beat Mumbai Indians. They outplayed them in the two hardest parts of a T20 on a slightly awkward surface: the middle overs and the emotional phase immediately after early wickets. Mumbai created the opening at 2/2 and still lost control. Delhi conceded only 162, absorbed the shock, and then let Sameer Rizvi produce the innings of the match. That is why this result feels more significant than a routine early-season win. It looked like a team performance, but it will be remembered as Rizvi’s night. 🚀
