Big picture
All games in the IPL are crucial, even when it pits one of the top teams against another that hasn't had things go its way much. The Delhi Capitals are flying high, on eight points from six games, while the Kolkata Knight Riders are in the bottom half, with two wins from six. Following consecutive cliffhangers, the Capitals would want a quieter ride, and while their batting has worked very well so far, Avesh Khan's emergence and Amit Mishra's re-emergence have given their side a nice, all-round sheen.
Their four wins so far have been largely down to their attacking openers, though. Prithvi Shaw and Shikhar Dhawan have three times had stands worth 50 or more, with the Capitals going on to win every time. The Knight Riders have lived the opposite experience. Nitish Rana started with consecutive half-centuries, but he has only 49 runs from his last four outings, and Shubman Gill has managed 89 runs in six innings.
That's not all. Their middle order has stuttered too, and when they have done well, it has been because Andre Russell, Dinesh Karthik or Pat Cummins breaking free in the late overs. As the halfway stage of the season approaches, they would want a quick fix. Sunil Narine and his spin colleague Varun Chakravarthy, as well as Cummins and the others, must be desperate for some assistance from their batters before it gets too late for the Knight Riders, who did, however, look good in their last game against the Punjab Kings. A couple of wins, and a lot might change.
Team news
The Capitals may stick to the same XI that went down to the Royal Challengers Bangalore by one run in their previous game. That said, Steven Smith has been jogging at a strike rate of only 112.67, which has often resulted in pressure on those who follow. Kagiso Rabada, too, hasn't yet met expectations, having gone at 8.94 with five wickets in as many matches this season. Sam Billings, Anrich Nortje and Chris Woakes are waiting for their chances.
The Knight Riders may decide to either push Gill down the order or drop him altogether. Could Karun Nair be an alternative? As a T20 opener, he strikes at 155.49 and has two centuries. Or Narine could be shifted up.
Likely XIs
Delhi Capitals: 1 Prithvi Shaw, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Steven Smith/Sam Billings, 4 Rishabh Pant (capt & wk), 5 Shimron Hetmyer, 6 Marcus Stoinis, 7 Axar Patel, 8 Amit Mishra, 9 Kagiso Rabada, 10 Avesh Khan, 11 Ishant Sharma
Kolkata Knight Riders: 1 Shubman Gill, 2 Nitish Rana, 3 Rahul Tripathi, 4 Sunil Narine, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Andre Russell, 7 Dinesh Karthik, 8 Pat Cummins, 9 Shivam Mavi, 10 Varun Chakravarthy, 11 Prasidh Krishna
Strategy punt
There is a case for the Knight Riders to open the bowling with Narine and Shivam Mavi to try and restrict the Capitals' in-form openers. While Shaw strikes at only 100 against Narine in the IPL, his strike rate of 141.7 against Mavi is lower than what he goes at against Cummins and Russell (marginally). Mavi has kept Dhawan relatively quiet in their exchanges so far - strike rate 90.9 - while against Narine, Dhawan scores at only 119.2, having also been dismissed twice.
The Knight Riders must try to keep Russell away when Mishra is in operation - and the Capitals would like the legspinner to have a go at the big-hitter. In five innings in the IPL, Mishra has conceded just 21 runs off 20 deliveries to Russell, and got him out once. That strike rate of 105 stands out when compared to what Russell has done against Axar Patel (216.7), Rabada (256.3) and Marcus Stoinis (344.4).
Stats that matter
Shaw has scores of 66, 99, 14 and 62 in four innings at a strike rate of 163.94 against the Knight Riders, with the Capitals winning all four matches.
Dhawan is the second-highest run-getter of the tournament so far, while Avesh Khan is the second-highest wicket-taker.
In the IPL, Eoin Morgan has a strike rate of 358.33 against Rabada, who is also yet to dismiss him.
Chakravarthy has 24 wickets since IPL 2020, which is the third-highest among spinners, with only Rashid Khan and Rahul Chahar ahead of him.