DHARAMSHALA: Few cricketing venues appear as beautiful as Dharamshala. The noise softens, the air lightens, the mountains rise from impossible angles, and the game feels less industrial, more elemental.With the Dhauladhar range standing like a painted wall behind the sightscreen, Punjab Kings will hope the change in altitude also alters the direction of their season when they take on Delhi Capitals at the HPCA Stadium here on Monday.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!The stadium sits in the lap of the mountains, framed by cedar slopes and low-drifting clouds that almost brush the floodlights. Even in May, evening games carry a chill. This week, the weather has felt heavier, with lingering mist, a sharper breeze, and rain in the forecast.
The pitch offers pace, carry and enough seam movement to keep quicks interested. But with short boundaries and a rapid outfield, once the ball stops moving, stroke players revel.Matches here often become highscoring affairs. Punjab hammered 236/5 against Lucknow Super Giants at this venue last season, proof that even mountain air cannot contain modern T20 hitting. Punjab need to find that sort of freedom again.Not long ago, they looked the most complete side in the competition, six wins in seven matches, suggesting a team finally at ease. Then came the slide. Losses to Rajasthan Royals, Gujarat Titans and Sunrisers Hyderabad have exposed cracks that now appear wider.The timing is the bigger concern. Momentum in T20 can vanish as quickly as the sun behind the Dhauladhar peaks, and Punjab have lost theirs just before the business end. Their catching in Hyderabad was ragged enough to turn the game. Arshdeep Singh and the seamers have leaked runs at key moments. Most significantly, the early thrust from Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimran Singh has slowed.Through it all, Shreyas Iyer has remained the calmest presence. His batting has held shape, and Punjab will need that composure in the coming week. Three remaining home games — against Delhi, MI and RCB — could define whether this season becomes another near-miss or something more.If Punjab are anxious, Delhi look drained. Five defeats in six games have pushed them down the table, and familiar questions are being posed. Their batting lacks certainty, unable to force tempo once early wickets fall. Kuldeep Yadav’s quiet season has dulled their middle-overs edge, while the fielding has been untidy.Even Mitchell Starc’s return carries a sense of delay, as if Delhi are trying to rediscover themselves after the tournament has moved on. They remain alive, but only mathematically and need a lot of things to go in their favour to advance.


