Hardik Pandya faced questions head-on. His Mumbai Indians stumbled again, this time crushed by the Chennai Super Kings. Another match, another setback - this one by eight wickets. Saturday’s loss piled pressure on a fading chance at the playoffs. Five titles behind them mean nothing now. Hopes thin out with each passing game.

Mumbai Indians opened the batting but never found their rhythm, ending at 159 for 7. Others faltered around him, yet Naman Dhir held firm with a gritty 57, the lone bright spot. Chasing that total, CSK reached the mark without strain by the 18th over, lifting their tally to eight points in nine matches and still very much alive in the hunt for the playoffs.

“We just couldn’t get momentum”: Hardik Pandya reflects on MI’s struggles

Still alive on paper, the Mumbai Indians find themselves stuck with only four points after nine games, seven defeats piling up as they hover close to the foot of the standings. Their struggles didn’t go unnoticed by Pandya, who saw how often his side fell short, coming up weaker at every turn.

Looking back at the innings, "They (CSK) played better, they bowled better, they fielded better, and they batted better," he added.

Hardik Pandya thought scoring between 180 and 190 might have shifted things. Still, Mumbai couldn’t pick up the pace, choosing caution over risk, a move that didn’t pay off.

"(A score of) 180-190 should have been a good total. We couldn't get the momentum. It was more about playing calculative cricket. Overall, as a bowling unit, they were better, and as a batting unit, we weren't better. The bowling options that we had, we went with it," he said.

On bowling, he brushed aside claims that pushing harder would’ve helped, since they’d already played their strongest cards.

Also Read: CSK outclass MI to keep playoff hopes alive as Hardik Pandya’s side slump to seventh defeat

Out front, Ruturaj Gaikwad held steady with an unbroken 67, steering CSK home. For him, the smaller target took pressure off right away. A calm beginning mattered just as much as seeing it through. That last piece, he handled it without fuss. Because someone had to stay, so he did.

"Feels good to bat till the end. I was always feeling well and confident. But in T20S, you can hit good shots straight to fielders. But my teammates and management made sure I was feeling well. I wanted to make sure to take the team to the end if I got a start," he added.

Last time around, the Mumbai Indians managed only four points after losing seven of nine games. Their spot near the bottom is ninth place and is holding steady. A slim chance remains for a playoff run. Still, climbing out feels harder with each match gone by.

This cricket news reflects the contrast in the fortune between these two teams; one is slumping to defeat after defeat, the other is balancing itself on the IPL table.