Cricket-Marsh seeks IPL redemption after disappointing T20 World Cup


Cricket - Indian Premier League - IPL - Royal Challengers Bengaluru v Lucknow Super Giants - M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru, India - April 15, 2026 Lucknow Super Giants' Mitchell Marsh in action REUTERS/Priyanshu Singh

April 22 (Reuters) - Mitchell Marsh ⁠is trying to put a disappointing Twenty20 World Cup campaign behind him but the Australian ⁠all-rounder concedes he has yet to hit his stride in the Indian Premier League ‌with the Lucknow Super Giants in urgent need of some inspiration.

Marsh delivered a stellar performance in the IPL last year, scoring 627 runs at an average of 48.23, including his highest score in the format with an innings of 117 off ​64 balls against Gujarat Titans.

But he has fallen far short of ⁠those lofty levels this year, with ⁠the 34-year-old accumulating only 155 runs in the first six matches, averaging 25.83.

With a run of three ⁠straight ‌defeats leaving Lucknow ninth of the IPL's 10 teams, Marsh knows he needs to find form fast.

"I probably haven't got going. I think you can maybe search a little bit too ⁠much at times," Marsh told Reuters.

"I know that I'm probably ​one or two boundaries away ‌from really getting going and it's about being consistent with my preparations and knowing that ⁠it will come."

With only ​two wins from their first six games, Lucknow are in danger of missing the playoffs for the third year in a row, but Marsh says there is time to turn things around.

"It's a long tournament and we've ⁠got great belief that we can challenge the best teams ​in the competition ... I think if we can put together a full 40 overs as a unit, we're going to be very hard to break," he said.

Marsh played a key role in helping Perth Scorchers ⁠win the Big Bash League in January and was primed to play a big role in Australia's T20 World Cup in February-March but a groin injury hampered his campaign.

Defeats by Zimbabwe and co-hosts Sri Lanka sealed Australia's first group stage exit since 2009.

"Pretty much every game is a knockout game with ​the way that it's structured up ... one failure can cost you a ⁠spot in the knockout stage," said Marsh, who did not want to discuss how the squad dealt ​with the early exit.

"Those conversations have happened behind closed doors," he ‌added.

Marsh said his focus was now on helping ​Lucknow win their first IPL trophy.

"I've got great faith in this group ... our best cricket is ahead of us," he added.

(Reporting by Chiranjit Ojha in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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