New Delhi : In the modern T20 landscape, where coaching manuals are thick with data and tactical complexity, the Sunrisers Hyderabad opening pair of Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma is thriving on a remarkably primitive philosophy. On Wednesday night at the Wankhede, that philosophy laid the founding stone for their record chase against Mumbai Indians in IPL 2026.
Facing a daunting 245-run chase against Mumbai Indians, Travishek produced a Powerplay for the ages. They hammered 92 runs in the first six overs, eventually stitching together a 129-run stand in just 8.4 overs. Even the league’s gold standard, Jasprit Bumrah, was not spared as the pair effectively ended the contest before the halfway mark of the innings.
The victory was SRH’s fifth on the bounce, a streak fueled by the relentless starts provided by the Australian veteran and the young Indian left-hander. Since they first paired up in 2024, they have amassed 1,639 runs at an average of 49.66. It is the most by an opening pair in the last three years of the IPL. This season alone, they lead the charts with 529 runs at a staggering average of 58.77.
‘SEE BALL, LIFT BALL’
While fans and analysts look for deep tactical secrets, Abhishek Sharma revealed that their success is rooted in a mindset of uncomplicated aggression.
“I mean, I always try to get out something of Head, but he’s just very quiet and he likes to do it with the bat most of the times,” Abhishek said after the match. “But still, I think whenever I ask him something, when he’s outscoring, he just have one answer, just do whatever the ball you lift and just go for it. And that’s the one, I think, philosophy we’ve been using in the few years now, is just lift the ball and hit it.”
Abhishek’s insight suggests a partnership built on instinctive reaction rather than over-analysis.
“Whenever you’re in pressure, just talk to the other partner, get some confidence, and then just do it. To be very honest, we always just congratulate each other on fifties and hundreds at a partnership. That said, that’s we just figure out on the big screen and nothing else. We just watch the ball and react.”
THE SPIN SPECIALIST
If Abhishek looks up to Head’s unflappable temperament, the Australian is equally in awe of the youngster’s technical prowess, particularly against the slower bowlers. As teams try to stifle Head with pace-off deliveries or defensive spin, the Southpaw simply hands the baton to his partner.
“I know that if spin comes on, I just give him the strike,” Head said.
“I probably haven’t played with a better spin-hitting batter ever. I think he’s one of the best I’ve ever seen in terms of ball-striking against spin. I know in the Powerplay, we saw again in this game that teams have started to go off pace against us. So, it’s about getting him on strike and watching him go about his work.”
Head noted that the partnership thrives on a silent understanding that removes the clutter of mid-pitch debates.
“He puts teams under immense pressure. It’s a great partnership; we don’t have to talk too much.”
By combining Head’s world-class ability to utilsze the pace of the ball and Abhishek’s clean striking against spin, SRH has created a pick your poison scenario for opposition captains. Whether it is a record-breaking Powerplay or a record-chase in Mumbai, the secret to Travishek remains as effective as it is simple: watch the ball, lift it, and hit it.









