Shreyas Iyer makes the stronger case for India’s white-ball future
Shreyas Iyer, not Shubman Gill, should be India’s white-ball captain. The BCCI are sitting at a real dilemma, and when you look at the IPL data, international records, and the bigger captaincy picture, one name stands out with much more conviction. Iyer has a track record of leading in high-pressure environments, giving him a clear edge over Gill, who, despite all his potential, is still figuring out what captaincy actually requires across different formats.
Shreyas Iyer’s IPL captaincy record speaks louder than opinion
Shreyas Iyer recently became the first captain in IPL history to lead three different franchises to a final, pulling off that feat with Delhi Capitals in 2020, Kolkata Knight Riders in 2024, and Punjab Kings in IPL 2025. That kind of leadership consistency is rare in the franchise world.
During the 2025 season, Iyer racked up 604 runs across 17 games at a strike rate of 175.07. He paired that batting form with sharp, independent tactical calls that effectively shut down the remote-controlled captain labels that stuck to him during his KKR stint. On the other hand, Shubman Gill led the Gujarat Titans to a fourth-place finish in 2025, showing he’s capable, but he hasn’t yet shown he can drag a team over the finish line from a tough spot.
Shubman Gill’s white-ball numbers reveal the gap at the top
Nobody is disputing Shubman Gill’s talent with the bat. However, his first few chapters as India’s white-ball skipper have made for some tough reading. Gill posted scores of 10, 9, and 24 in the three-match ODI series against Australia. That 14.33 average is actually the lowest for any Indian ODI captain in a bilateral series against the Aussies.
He also went through a rough patch during the Asia Cup 2025, managing just 127 runs in seven matches. This isn’t just a temporary slump; it looks like a pattern of inconsistency surfacing right when the captaincy needs him to set the tone at the crease.
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Why the BCCI must act decisively on India’s white-ball captain?
A senior BCCI official has hinted that the long-term plan is to split the roles: one captain for white-ball and one for red-ball. This means the current three-captain setup is just a stopgap. After Shreyas Iyer’s IPL success, BCCI sources have admitted he can’t be ignored for T20 internationals anymore, and he is now firmly in the running for the permanent captaincy. With the 2028 T20 World Cup on the horizon, India need a leader who wins trophies after Suryakumar Yadav, reads the game under pressure without blinking, and stands by his tactical choices. That profile fits Shreyas Iyer perfectly.
