The upcoming conclusion of IPL 2026 marks a generational shift, with five league icons likely stepping away due to injuries, franchise overhaul strategies, and dipping performance metrics.

1. MS Dhoni (Chennai Super Kings):

The 44-year-old maestro faces an inevitable exit. MS Dhoni has sat out matches throughout IPL 2026 due to a severe, recurring calf injury. Fans have yet to see him take the field this season. With Chennai Super Kings successfully embedding Sanju Samson into the middle order and handling wicketkeeping duties flawlessly, the squad no longer needs to rush Dhoni out of recovery. League veterans like Ravichandran Ashwin have noted that the final league stage match against Sunrisers Hyderabad on May 18 at Chepauk could serve as Dhoni’s absolute final on-field farewell.

2. Sunil Narine (Kolkata Knight Riders):

The 37-year-old Trinidadian multi-tool is nearing the natural physical limits of a T20 all-rounder. Sunil Narine made history in IPL 2026 by becoming the first overseas player to reach the historic 200-wicket milestone. He maintains an exceptional 6.51 economy rate, but having already walked away from international cricket, managing the physical demands of opening the batting and bowling maximum overs is taking its toll. Ahead of the next cycle, Kolkata Knight Riders is expected to prioritize long-term, younger international retentions, making IPL 2026 his ideal retirement peak.

3. Ajinkya Rahane (Kolkata Knight Riders):

The 37-year-old veteran is under immense scrutiny as KKR’s current captain. KKR has endured a disastrous IPL 2026 run. Reports indicate that Ajinkya Rahane is highly likely to lose his captaincy due to tactical inconsistencies and a struggling strike rate that slows down the top order. Unlike his explosive resurgence in 2023, Rahane has managed only 237 runs across 11 matches this season. If released into a fresh mega-auction at age 38, he faces a minimal chance of being picked up, pointing directly toward retirement.  

4. Ishant Sharma (Gujarat Titans):

The 37-year-old former spearhead of India’s red-ball revolution is reaching the end of his franchise run. Fast bowling over a two-decade career has left Ishant Sharma with major injury-management hurdles. With young express pacers dominating the circuit, Ishant is expected to transition into a coaching or mentorship capacity following this tournament.

5. Marcus Stoinis (Punjab Kings):

The 36-year-old Australian powerhouse represents the overseas contingent facing a changing market.Secured by the Punjab Kings for a massive ₹11 crore budget, the pressure on international all-rounders to deliver match-winning impacts every night is immense. Teams are shifting toward younger global explosive talents. As a regular on the global franchise circuit, Marcus Stoinis may choose to withdraw from the rigid, multi-month IPL schedule to focus on shorter, less physically demanding leagues overseas.