Abhishek Sharma was dismissed for a first-ball duck for Sunrisers Hyderabad against Rajasthan Royals at Uppal stadium on April 13, 2026, and the blow carried more weight than a single scoreless outing. It was his seventh duck in T20 cricket in 2026, a mark that made him the Indian with the most ducks in a calendar year in the format.
Sharma tried to go after Jofra Archer from the opening ball, but edged a short delivery and was caught by Ravi Bishnoi at third man. The wicket set the tone for Rajasthan Royals’ night, with the visitors staying unbeaten in the tournament, and social media quickly filled with reactions that went beyond the match itself. One post on the league’s live feed captured the moment in capital letters: “WHAT. A. START Jofra Archer strikes first ball Updates.”
The numbers around Sharma have been hard to ignore. He had already been dismissed three times without scoring in the T20 World Cup 2026, and this was his second duck in the last three games. In IPL 2026, he has 129 runs in five matches with one fifty, a return that sits uneasily beside the aggressive approach he has taken from the first ball, a style that has often brought quick exits as well as quick runs.
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The record he broke had belonged to others who spent far more balls at the crease. Gurkeerat Singh Mann had five ducks in 19 innings in 2013, while Rohit Sharma and Sanju Samson each had six ducks in 32 innings in 2018 and 2024, respectively. Sharma reached seven ducks in 18 innings, a number that underlines how often the gamble has not paid off this year.
That has spilled into a wider debate about India’s T20 future. Fans on social media asked the Indian team management to consider Vaibhav Sooryavanshi in the T20I setup instead of Sharma, pointing to the Rajasthan Royals batter’s numbers in IPL 2026. Sooryavanshi has 200 runs in four matches, a strike rate of 266.66, an average of 50 and two fifties. Whether that push changes anything is another matter, but the contrast is now plain: one young batter is making every innings look brief, while another is forcing a selection conversation with almost every strike.