Heated Words Exchanged Between Tristan Stubbs And LSG’s Prince Yadav During IPL 2026 Match. Watch

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By news.saerio.com






The Lucknow Super Giants vs Delhi Capitals IPL 2026 match at the Ekana Cricket Stadium saw heated words being exchanged between Delhi Capitals’ Tristan Stubbs and Lucknow Super Giants pacer Prince Yadav. The incident happened in the fifth over. After the fifth ball of the over, Prince Yadav went all the way to Tristan Stubbs and stared at the South African batter. Stubbs did not hold back and returned the gesture.

Earlier, Lucknow Super Giants put up an embarrassing batting display with some questionable tactical calls, getting shot out for 141 in 18.4 overs in their IPL match against Delhi Capitals on Wednesday. Delhi Capitals skipper Axar Patel opted to bowl first, and even though the Ekana Stadium wicket wasn’t a belter, there could be no tangible excuse for the LSG unit for its pathetic batting display.

A fit-again T. Natarajan (3/29 in 4 overs), Kuldeep Yadav (2/31 in 4 overs) and the brilliant Lungi Ngidi (3/27 in 3.4 overs), who bowled perhaps a contender for the ‘ball of the tournament’, made life miserable for the home team, which looked as bad on the field as it had seemed on paper, as per pre-tournament predictions.

Captain Rishabh Pant, in a surprising move from the team’s perspective, broke the successful opening pair of Aiden Markram and Mitchell Marsh and promoted himself to the top of the order.

Pant (7 off 9 balls) started with a nice back-drive off Mukesh Kumar, but in the next over was run out at the non-striker’s end when the bowler got a fingertip to a smashing straight hit from Marsh.

But, to be frank, Pant didn’t look comfortable once, despite that opening boundary, and it seemed more like a desperate attempt to get his India T20 slot back.

Aiden Markram (11) hit a six and a four, but DC skipper Axar Patel’s wicket-to-wicket delivery breached his defence.

The highly rated Ayush Badoni (0) edged one from T. Natarajan that was angled across, but it was Ngidi’s newfound confidence in executing slower deliveries that became the standout moment of the first half.

It was a floating off-cutter that beat the dangerous Nicholas Pooran (8 off 8 balls). Pooran, whose philosophy hinges on bat speed, saw the loopy trajectory of the delivery dip late as the ball sneaked between bat and pad to hit the stumps.

In Ngidi’s case, there was no perceptible change in his arm speed as he took considerable pace off the ball.

Ngidi, who has perfected pace-off deliveries with variable lengths, tightened the noose on the LSG batters. He also accounted for Shahbaz Ahmed with a wide slower yorker, which is a difficult art to execute.

As for Kuldeep, he took some punishment initially but did the job well by dismissing the dangerous Marsh with a googly that saw the bat face turn in his hand, the leading edge flying to mid-off

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