A hat-trick of shambolic seasons for Warriors
For the third year in a row, Warriors were nowhere in the running for a place in the playoffs

Once again, hardly anything went right for Warriors • BCCI
Even in their third season in the IPL, Pune Warriors - the most expensive team - showed no signs of having got their act together. After finishing second from bottom in their maiden season and at the bottom of the table in 2012, Warriors started the season thinking things could only better. And they appeared to have got the resources right this year with one of the strongest squads on paper at the start of the season.
In a season where hardly anything went right for them, only three players showed some sort of consistency. Aaron Finch, who came in as Clarke's replacement and ended up leading the side for most of the season, and Robin Uthappa helped the team get off to solid starts. Both Finch and Uthappa finished in the bottom half of the top-10 run-getters in the IPL. And Bhuvneshwar Kumar was the pick of the bowlers, mixing accuracy with his typical early movement to finish with a superb economy-rate of 6.50.
Everything. Well, almost everything. Ashok Dinda's death bowling became something of a joke, and the middle-order batsmen were miserable than even Daredevils'. If two captains in the second season wasn't enough to unsettle the team, three captains this season made it even worse.
It's a close call between Aaron Finch and Bhuvneshwar Kumar. But one would be inclined to pick Finch, first for agreeing to lead a sinking ship and then keeping his chin up despite the team's losing spree for much of his stint as captain. More importantly, he continued his form with the bat even after taking charge of the team.
Another close call. Dinda had a torrid time, while Yuvraj Singh and Abhishek Nayar had seasons to forget as well. Yuvraj, the man who was supposed to lead the Warriors' batting charge, failed miserably, scoring just 238 runs from 13 innings, with highest of 34. Nayar, the most sought-after Indian in the auction ahead of the season on the back of a sensational Ranji season, managed just 66 from nine innings at less than a run a ball. What tempered a bad season a bit for Yuvraj was his contribution with the ball, even though he didn't bowl regularly. And Nayar's lack of opportunities would help him avoid the tag of being the worst of the lot. As for Dinda, the less said the better.
There was no debutant who shone for Warriors. But Finch could fit the bill. After going unsold at the IPL auction, he was belatedly signed on as Clarke's replacement, and he ended up as the stand-out performer for the franchise.
Unfortunately, the most memorable moment for Warriors was when they suffered at the hands of Chris Gayle who piled on unbeaten 175 - the highest individual score in T20s - and helped Royal Challengers Bangalore register the highest ever T20 score against a hapless Warriors attack.
When the campaign has been a shambles three seasons in a row, it is time for a complete overhaul.
Amol Karhadkar is a correspondent at ESPNcricinfo