Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad Match Scorecard — IPL 2025 Match 10: Complete Analysis & Highlights

Cricket fans across India witnessed a masterclass in pace bowling as the Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad match scorecard from Match 10 of IPL 2025 delivered one of the tournament’s most stunning individual performances. At the Dr. Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium in Visakhapatnam on March 30, 2025, Mitchell Starc produced an historic five-wicket haul to dismantle the Sunrisers Hyderabad batting lineup, restricting them to 163 all out before Delhi Capitals cruised home with seven wickets and four overs to spare. Viewers on Star Sports and JioCinema across India watched every moment of this compelling afternoon contest unfold.
Table of Contents
- Match Overview
- Match Details
- Full Scorecard & Statistical Analysis
- SRH Batting Innings Breakdown
- DC Bowling Innings Breakdown
- Key Partnerships — SRH Innings
- Fall of Wickets — SRH Innings
- DC Batting Innings Breakdown
- SRH Bowling Innings Breakdown
- Match Highlights & Turning Points
- Player of the Match Performance
- Squad Information
- Star Players to Watch
- Recent Head-to-Head Record
- Series Context — IPL 2025
- Match Summary & Conclusion
- Frequently Asked Questions
Match Overview
The tenth match of IPL 2025 pitted two teams with contrasting early-season momentum against each other under Visakhapatnam’s afternoon sun. Delhi Capitals arrived with two wins from two matches, their confidence soaring after a dramatic last-ball victory over Lucknow Super Giants in their opener. Sunrisers Hyderabad, the finalists from 2024, had split their first two games and were eager to reassert the aggressive batting identity that had made them the most feared side in the previous season.
Sunrisers Hyderabad won the toss and chose to bat first, backing their explosive top order to set an imposing target. It was a decision that would quickly unravel under the sustained pressure of Mitchell Starc’s opening spell. The ACA-VDCA pitch, known for offering pace bowlers early movement before settling into a batting-friendly surface, proved the perfect stage for Starc’s craft. The highest-ever total at this venue was KKR’s massive 272 against DC in IPL 2024, a figure that underlined how dangerous conditions could be — yet on this afternoon, Delhi’s bowlers turned the tables entirely.
Match Details
| Match Information | Details |
| Match | IPL 2025, Match 10 |
| Format | IPL T20 |
| Venue | Dr. Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam |
| Date | March 30, 2025 |
| Toss | SRH won the toss, elected to bat first |
| Result | Delhi Capitals won by 7 wickets |
| Player of the Match | Mitchell Starc (5/35) |
| Broadcast (India) | Star Sports / JioCinema |
| Series Context | Match 10 of IPL 2025 league stage |
The afternoon start at 15:30 local time meant the pitch was at its freshest and firmest during the powerplay, giving seam bowlers maximum assistance from a surface that had been baked by morning sun. After being asked to field first, the DC bowlers overcame hot conditions to reduce SRH to 37 for four in the fifth over — a collapse that ultimately defined the contest.
Full Scorecard & Statistical Analysis
Match Summary Table
| Team | Innings | Total Runs | Wickets | Overs | Run Rate |
| Sunrisers Hyderabad | 1st Innings | 163 | All out | 18.4 | 8.73 |
| Delhi Capitals | 1st Innings | 166/3 | 3 wickets | 16.0 | 10.38 |
Result: Delhi Capitals won by 7 wickets
The run rate differential tells a stark story. Delhi’s 10.38 runs per over during the chase compared to SRH’s 8.73 in their batting innings illustrates the confidence and clarity with which the Capitals approached the target. DC raced home in 16 overs to make it two wins from two, their fourth-over powerplay dominance with the ball converting cleanly into batting authority in the second half.
SRH Batting Innings Breakdown
Sunrisers Hyderabad Batting Scorecard
| Batsman | Dismissal | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | Strike Rate |
| Travis Head | b Starc | 22 | 12 | 2 | 2 | 183.33 |
| Abhishek Sharma | run out (Head mix-up) | 1 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 33.33 |
| Ishan Kishan | c deep backward point b Starc | 2 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 50.00 |
| Nitish Kumar Reddy | b Starc (off-cutter) | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
| Heinrich Klaasen | c & b Mohit Sharma | 32 | 19 | 2 | 2 | 168.42 |
| Aniket Verma | c Fraser-McGurk b Kuldeep | 74 | 41 | 5 | 6 | 180.49 |
| Abhinav Manohar | b Kuldeep | 8 | 9 | 1 | 0 | 88.89 |
| Pat Cummins (c) | b Kuldeep | 7 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 116.67 |
| Harshal Patel | b Starc | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 100.00 |
| Wiaan Mulder | b Starc | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
| Mohammed Shami | not out | 1 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 33.33 |
Extras: 12 | Total: 163/10 (18.4 overs)
The SRH innings was a tale of catastrophic top-order collapse followed by a lone-warrior rescue mission from Aniket Verma. The top three — Travis Head, Abhishek Sharma, and Ishan Kishan — contributed just 25 runs combined, a shocking underperformance from a unit that had terrorised bowling attacks throughout IPL 2024.
Abhishek Sharma was run out for one in a casual manner in the first over following a horrible mix-up with Travis Head. The confusion between two of T20 cricket’s most destructive openers — a catastrophic breakdown in communication on a wide long-on call — gifted Delhi their first breakthrough without a ball being bowled in anger. It set an anxious tone that SRH’s middle order could never fully shake.
Head himself fell for 22 off 12 balls, his innings containing moments of characteristic brilliance — two fours and two sixes — before Starc extracted a fatal edge that ended his threat early. It was the second time Starc had dismissed the Australian white-ball opener in the IPL in just seven deliveries, a psychological battle Starc is clearly winning comprehensively. Ishan Kishan then slashed Starc straight to deep backward point, and in the same over, Nitish Kumar Reddy miscued an off-cutter from the left-arm seamer — three wickets of exceptional quality reduced SRH to a precarious 37/4 inside five overs.
Heinrich Klaasen provided the most fluent counterattack of any SRH batsman outside Verma, smashing 32 off just 19 deliveries. His two sixes — one pulled magnificently over midwicket, another lofted straight — showed Klaasen’s ability to generate extraordinary power from minimal backswing. His departure to Mohit Sharma, caught and bowled from a mistimed drive, ended SRH’s best partnership of the innings at 77 runs for the fifth wicket.
Aniket Verma’s innings was the defining individual performance of the SRH innings. Verma stood tall with his 74-run knock off 42 balls with five fours and six sixes. His attack on Axar Patel — a four and two sixes in a single over — showed fearlessness that belied his inexperience at this level. He targeted Axar Patel and went for a four and a couple of sixes in his over, then hit a big six off Kuldeep Yadav before attempting the same delivery next ball and being caught at the boundary by Jake Fraser-McGurk. That dismissal, at 156/7, ended SRH’s only realistic hope of posting a challenging total.
DC Bowling Innings Breakdown
Delhi Capitals Bowling Figures
| Bowler | Overs | Maidens | Runs | Wickets | Economy Rate | Bowling Figures |
| Mitchell Starc | 3.4 | 0 | 35 | 5 | 9.55 | 3.4-0-35-5 |
| Kuldeep Yadav | 4.0 | 0 | 22 | 3 | 5.50 | 4-0-22-3 |
| Mohit Sharma | 4.0 | 0 | 34 | 1 | 8.50 | 4-0-34-1 |
| Axar Patel | 4.0 | 0 | 41 | 0 | 10.25 | 4-0-41-0 |
| Vipraj Nigam | 3.0 | 0 | 23 | 0 | 7.67 | 3-0-23-0 |
Mitchell Starc became the first DC pacer to pick up a fifer in the league’s history, and his figures of 3.4-0-35-5 represent far more than raw statistics. The key to Starc’s devastation was variation — he combined searing pace deliveries angled into right-handers with a brutal off-cutter that he has refined significantly since joining the IPL circuit. He took the crucial wickets of Ishan Kishan, Nitish Reddy and Travis Head within the first five overs, each dismissal different in method. The Kishan wicket came from a slashing drive outside off; the Reddy wicket from a perfectly disguised off-cutter that the batsman never read; the Head dismissal from a full-length delivery angled into the stumps that forced an edge.
Kuldeep Yadav’s figures of 4-0-22-3 with 13 dot balls — earning him the Most Dot Balls award — were equally critical in strangling the middle and lower order. It was Kuldeep Yadav’s show as the left-arm spinner produced a spell of 3 for 22 in four overs to stifle the SRH lineup. His dismissal of Abhinav Manohar, Pat Cummins, and Aniket Verma spanned three distinct phases — the middle overs and death — demonstrating the control and penetration that make him one of the finest wrist-spinners in the world. The wicket of Cummins, caught off a top-spinner that gripped and turned sharply, was particularly well conceived.
Mohit Sharma’s dismissal of Klaasen was the crucial middle-innings breakthrough — Klaasen, the most destructive finisher in franchise cricket, ended a fifth-wicket partnership of 77 that had given SRH hope of reaching 180-plus.
Key Partnerships — SRH Innings
The partnership data reveals the structural fragility of SRH’s innings despite Verma’s heroics. Four of the ten wickets fell for single-digit contributions, meaning the tail offered almost nothing.
- 5th wicket (Klaasen & Verma): 77 runs — the match’s defining partnership for SRH, generating the only sustained scoring momentum after the top-order implosion
- 1st wicket (Head & Sharma): 13 runs — ended by a catastrophic run-out that altered the entire complexion of the innings
- All remaining partnerships: fewer than 15 runs each
The Klaasen-Verma alliance represented exactly the counter-attacking spirit SRH preach — aggressive, boundary-heavy, and psychologically defiant. However, 77 runs from that partnership ultimately proved insufficient given the scale of the early collapse.
Fall of Wickets — SRH Innings
| Wicket | Score | Batsman Dismissed | Over |
| 1st | 13/1 | Abhishek Sharma (run out) | 0.5 |
| 2nd | 22/2 | Ishan Kishan (b Starc) | 2.1 |
| 3rd | 22/3 | Nitish Kumar Reddy (b Starc) | 2.4 |
| 4th | 37/4 | Travis Head (b Starc) | 4.6 |
| 5th | 114/5 | Heinrich Klaasen (c&b Mohit) | 11.2 |
| 6th | 130/6 | Abhinav Manohar (b Kuldeep) | 13.4 |
| 7th | 142/7 | Pat Cummins (b Kuldeep) | 15.2 |
| 8th | 156/8 | Aniket Verma (c Fraser-McGurk b Kuldeep) | 17.1 |
| 9th | 163/9 | Harshal Patel (b Starc) | 18.3 |
| 10th | 163/10 | Wiaan Mulder (b Starc) | 18.4 |
The fall of wickets chart exposes SRH’s batting collapse with clinical clarity. Losing three wickets in the space of three deliveries between overs 2.1 and 2.4 — Kishan and Reddy both falling within three balls of each other — is the kind of mid-powerplay disintegration that even deep batting lineups struggle to recover from. The recovery from 37/4 to 114/5 — a 77-run stand — speaks to Verma and Klaasen’s quality. But the implosion that followed, losing five wickets for just 49 runs across the final seven overs, confirmed the limited depth beyond those two.
DC Batting Innings Breakdown
Delhi Capitals Batting Scorecard
| Batsman | Dismissal | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | Strike Rate |
| Jake Fraser-McGurk | c & b Zeeshan Ansari | 38 | 32 | 3 | 2 | 118.75 |
| Faf du Plessis | c Klaasen b Zeeshan Ansari | 50 | 27 | 5 | 3 | 185.19 |
| KL Rahul | c Kishan b Zeeshan Ansari | 15 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 300.00 |
| Abishek Porel | not out | 34 | 18 | 3 | 2 | 188.89 |
| Tristan Stubbs | not out | 21 | 14 | 2 | 1 | 150.00 |
Extras: 8 | Total: 166/3 (16.0 overs)
Delhi’s run chase was a masterclass in aggressive yet controlled batting. Jake Fraser-McGurk (38 off 32) and Faf du Plessis (50 off 27) laid a solid foundation for other batters, their opening partnership of 66 runs setting a pace that made the 164-run target feel entirely manageable from the third over onwards.
Faf du Plessis’s half-century — 50 off just 27 balls — was a statement innings from a batsman who brings experience, timing, and an unusually calm mind to the T20 format. His three sixes included a stunning straight hit over the bowler’s head and two elegant pull shots that cleared the midwicket boundary with minimal effort. His strike rate of 185.19 never dipped into the destructive mode of a Fraser-McGurk, but it was precisely calibrated — rotating strike in dot-ball phases and attacking the full deliveries with precision.
KL Rahul could score 15 runs in five balls with two fours and a six — a blistering cameo at nearly 300 strike rate that confirmed his role as the accelerator entering the middle overs. His dismissal to Zeeshan Ansari’s spin gave SRH their only moment of competitive bowling in the chase. Abishek Porel (34* off 18) and Tristan Stubbs (21*) teamed up to finish off the chase in 16 overs with seven wickets in hand. Porel’s Electric Striker award — for a strike rate of 188.89 — underscored Delhi’s extraordinary batting depth, where their No.4 finishes games with the same authority their openers begin them.
SRH Bowling Innings Breakdown
Sunrisers Hyderabad Bowling Figures
| Bowler | Overs | Maidens | Runs | Wickets | Economy Rate | Bowling Figures |
| Zeeshan Ansari | 4.0 | 0 | 42 | 3 | 10.50 | 4-0-42-3 |
| Mohammed Shami | 4.0 | 0 | 38 | 0 | 9.50 | 4-0-38-0 |
| Harshal Patel | 3.0 | 0 | 29 | 0 | 9.67 | 3-0-29-0 |
| Wiaan Mulder | 3.0 | 0 | 34 | 0 | 11.33 | 3-0-34-0 |
| Pat Cummins | 2.0 | 0 | 21 | 0 | 10.50 | 2-0-21-0 |
Zeeshan Ansari’s 3/42 represents SRH’s best bowling effort in the chase, but the figures also illuminate the problem — he conceded 42 runs in his four overs while taking three wickets, reflecting a situation where Delhi’s batsmen simply outpaced his threat. Zeeshan Ansari was the pick of the bowlers for SRH, finishing with figures of 3/42, but his wickets came too late and too expensively to alter the match’s trajectory. Mohammed Shami’s four wicketless overs were particularly costly — the former India seamer struggled to find his rhythm on a pitch that offered less pace-bowling assistance in the second innings as the surface settled.
The economy rate comparison between the two bowling attacks — Delhi averaging 8.19 runs per over across SRH’s innings versus SRH’s 10.25 across DC’s chase — quantifies the gulf in bowling execution that determined this match’s outcome.
Match Highlights & Turning Points
Three decisive moments shaped this contest:
Turning Point 1 — The Abhishek Sharma Run-Out (Over 0.5): Before a single legitimate bowling wicket had been taken, SRH lost their opener to a catastrophic miscommunication. Head called for a run, Sharma responded, and a direct throw from the covers ended a promising opening partnership before it began. In a team built around top-order aggression, losing one of the two most destructive openers in T20 cricket to a run-out in the first over is a near-fatal blow. The panic it introduced into SRH’s batting order was visible across the next three overs.
Turning Point 2 — Starc’s Double Strike (Over 2.1–2.4): Ishan Kishan then slashed Starc straight to deep backward point. In the same over, Nitish Kumar Reddy miscued an off-cutter from DC’s seasoned left-arm pacer. Two wickets in three balls — one from a horizontal-bat slash, one from a perfectly disguised variation — dropped SRH to 22/3 before the end of the third over. This was the moment the match tilted irreversibly toward Delhi.
Turning Point 3 — Verma’s Dismissal at 156: Aniket Verma’s departure in the 17th over, caught brilliantly by Fraser-McGurk running in from the long-off boundary, removed SRH’s last competitive weapon. Starc dismissed Harshal Patel and Wiaan Mulder in the 19th over to complete his five-wicket haul, ending any hope of a final flourish. The last three wickets fell for seven runs in under two overs.
Player of the Match Performance
Mitchell Starc won the Player of the Match award for his five-wicket haul in the first innings. The Delhi Capitals star bowled a game-changing spell of 5/35 to help his team bowl the Sunrisers Hyderabad out for 165 runs. Starc accounted for the wickets of Ishan Kishan, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Travis Head, Harshal Patel, and Wiaan Mulder to turn the game in DC’s favour.
The 35-year-old became the first DC pacer to pick up a fifer in the league’s history, an achievement that underlines both the rarity of his performance and the high-scoring environment of the IPL in which it was produced. Starc’s mastery lies in his ability to switch between methods — angled full deliveries that swing late, off-cutters that check the pace viciously, and back-of-a-length bouncers that test top-order batsmen who are primed to drive. Against Head, he went full and straight; against Kishan, he invited the slash; against Reddy, he produced the off-cutter at the exact moment the batsman was expecting pace.
Starc couldn’t hold back from taking a subtle dig at his Australian teammate Travis Head at the mid-innings break, noting how Head no longer faces the new ball against him — a playful acknowledgement of a rivalry that clearly motivates both men. His Fantasy King of the Match award of 153 fantasy points and his rise to No.2 on the IPL 2025 Purple Cap standings confirmed this as not merely a match-winning performance but a career-defining one in franchise cricket.
Squad Information
Delhi Capitals Squad (Playing XI)
| Player | Role | Batting Style | Bowling Style |
| Jake Fraser-McGurk | Batsman | Right-hand bat | Right-arm medium |
| Faf du Plessis | Batsman | Right-hand bat | Right-arm medium |
| KL Rahul | Batsman/WK | Right-hand bat | — |
| Abishek Porel | Batsman | Right-hand bat | — |
| Tristan Stubbs | Batsman | Right-hand bat | — |
| Axar Patel (c) | All-rounder | Left-hand bat | Slow left-arm orthodox |
| Vipraj Nigam | All-rounder | Right-hand bat | Right-arm off-break |
| Kuldeep Yadav | Bowler | Left-hand bat | Slow left-arm wrist-spin |
| Mitchell Starc | Bowler | Left-hand bat | Left-arm fast |
| Mohit Sharma | Bowler | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast-medium |
| Mukesh Kumar | Bowler | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast-medium |
Sunrisers Hyderabad Squad (Playing XI)
| Player | Role | Batting Style | Bowling Style |
| Travis Head | Batsman | Left-hand bat | Right-arm off-break |
| Abhishek Sharma | All-rounder | Left-hand bat | Slow left-arm orthodox |
| Ishan Kishan | Batsman/WK | Left-hand bat | — |
| Nitish Kumar Reddy | All-rounder | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast-medium |
| Heinrich Klaasen | Batsman/WK | Right-hand bat | — |
| Aniket Verma | Batsman | Right-hand bat | — |
| Abhinav Manohar | Batsman | Right-hand bat | — |
| Pat Cummins (c) | All-rounder | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast |
| Harshal Patel | Bowler | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast-medium |
| Mohammed Shami | Bowler | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast-medium |
| Zeeshan Ansari | Bowler | Right-hand bat | Slow left-arm orthodox |
Star Players to Watch
Mitchell Starc (Delhi Capitals): This performance announced Starc as the most dangerous fast bowler in IPL 2025. At 35, his ability to vary pace while maintaining high-80s/low-90s mph radar readings distinguishes him from younger contemporaries. His psychological hold over Travis Head — a genuine match-winner for any T20 team globally — is a strategic weapon Delhi’s captain Axar Patel will deploy at every opportunity going forward.
Aniket Verma (Sunrisers Hyderabad): Aniket Verma fought like a lone warrior for the Sunrisers Hyderabad, scoring 74 runs. He smacked six maximums and five fours in his fantastic knock. At 74 off 41 with six sixes against a genuine IPL attack, Verma showed the raw talent to become SRH’s next power-hitting phenomenon. His ability to identify his hitting zones and rotate strike in pressure phases speaks to a cricket intelligence that will only grow with experience.
Kuldeep Yadav (Delhi Capitals): Thirteen dot balls in four overs earning 3/22 is the sort of economy-rate bowling that defines titles. Kuldeep’s chinaman variations — the googly that turns away from left-handers, the top-spinner that skids on sharply — continue to be among the most difficult deliveries to pick in world cricket.
Recent Head-to-Head Record — Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad
| Format | Total Matches | DC Wins | SRH Wins | No Result |
| IPL T20 | 26 | 13 | 13 | 0 |
The two teams have locked horns 25 times in the IPL, with the SunRisers leading the Capitals by a slight margin — though this result in Visakhapatnam levelled the all-time head-to-head at 13 wins apiece going into the 55th match in May 2025. The rivalry’s balance reflects its nature — two sides with very different playing philosophies producing competitive cricket across formats and seasons.
Historically, SRH’s crushing 67-run win in IPL 2024 — where they posted 266/7 on the back of Travis Head’s 89 off 32 balls and Abhishek Sharma’s 46 off just 12 balls, combining in the highest powerplay total in T20 history with 125 runs in six overs — stands as the high-water mark of SRH’s batting aggression against Delhi. The March 30, 2025 result was Delhi’s answer: not with bat, but with a pace bowling masterclass that SRH’s top order had no answer for.
Series Context — IPL 2025
Delhi Capitals had kicked off their IPL 2025 campaign with an incredible one-wicket win over Lucknow Super Giants in Visakhapatnam, with Ashutosh Sharma (66* off 31) and Vipraj Nigam (39 off 15) lifting Delhi to victory. This second consecutive win confirmed DC’s emergence as genuine title contenders, with their bowling attack — led by Starc and Kuldeep — proving unexpectedly formidable in Indian conditions.
For SRH, the defeat compounded concerns about their batting fragility against quality swing bowling. Former India player Aakash Chopra questioned SRH’s batting approach, particularly disappointed with Nitish Kumar Reddy’s shot selection that led to his dismissal — a two-ball duck representing one of the most wasteful performances from a player of Reddy’s talent in recent IPL memory. SRH coach Daniel Vettori reiterated his side would not change their aggressive brand, but this match demonstrated the fine margins between that brand succeeding and collapsing entirely.
The two sides met again in Match 55 of IPL 2025, on May 5 at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad — but that match was called off due to rain after Delhi Capitals had posted 133/7, becoming only the second no-result game of the season. The March 30 encounter in Visakhapatnam therefore stands as the definitive Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad match of IPL 2025.
Match Summary & Conclusion
The Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad match scorecard from IPL 2025 Match 10 will be remembered principally for Mitchell Starc’s historic five-wicket haul — a performance that placed him among the finest individual bowling displays in Delhi Capitals’ franchise history. His clinical dismantling of SRH’s vaunted batting lineup, particularly the first-over wicket of Travis Head and the back-to-back destruction of Kishan and Reddy in the second over, established the template for Delhi’s dominant victory margin of seven wickets.
Aniket Verma’s lone-ranger 74 provided the sole counternarrative — a display of fearless batting that gave SRH’s performance dignity without ultimately altering its outcome. Delhi’s batting chase, led by Faf du Plessis’s composed half-century and Abishek Porel’s electric finish, confirmed this as a comprehensive all-round team performance rather than a one-man show.
The Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad match scorecard from Visakhapatnam ultimately reflects a team — Delhi — that has identified its match-winning combination early in the tournament, and another — SRH — whose batting-first philosophy carries extraordinary upside when it fires, and equally extraordinary vulnerability when it does not.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who won the Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad IPL 2025 match? Delhi Capitals won by seven wickets in Match 10 of IPL 2025 at Visakhapatnam on March 30, 2025. Delhi restricted SRH to 163 all out and chased the target down in 16 overs with seven wickets in hand.
Who was the Player of the Match in DC vs SRH IPL 2025? Mitchell Starc won the Player of the Match award for his career-best five-wicket haul of 5/35, becoming the first Delhi Capitals pace bowler to take a fifer in IPL history.
What was SRH’s highest scorer vs Delhi Capitals in IPL 2025? Aniket Verma was SRH’s top scorer with 74 runs off 41 balls, including six sixes and five fours — a dominant individual performance that kept SRH competitive despite the top-order collapse.
What was the head-to-head record between Delhi Capitals and Sunrisers Hyderabad in IPL 2025? DC won the completed match of the two meetings in IPL 2025 — the March 30 game by seven wickets. The May 5 fixture was abandoned due to rain with no result. The all-time IPL head-to-head is level at 13 wins each after 26 completed meetings.
Where can Indian fans watch Delhi Capitals vs Sunrisers Hyderabad matches? IPL 2025 matches are broadcast on the Star Sports network in India and streamed live on JioCinema. Both platforms offer Hindi and English commentary options, with JioCinema providing free streaming for mobile users.
Did Mitchell Starc break any records in the DC vs SRH IPL 2025 match? Yes — Starc’s 5/35 was both his maiden five-wicket haul in T20 cricket and the first five-wicket haul by a Delhi Capitals pace bowler in IPL history. It also lifted him to No.2 on the IPL 2025 Purple Cap standings at that stage of the tournament.
