The IPL playoff format is based on the Page-McIntyre system, designed to reward league-stage consistency. By giving the top two teams a second chance through Qualifier 1, it increases the likelihood of deserving teams reaching the final.
Published Date – 30 May 2026, 04:22 PM

By Stanley Theodore
Hyderabad: Ever wondered why the top two teams of the IPL end up playing the finals 12 of the last 15 times? And an equal number of times, not the same seasons, the winner of Qualifier 1 lifted the trophy. Before you shout bias there is sound logic that goes behind the present “playoffs system” benefitting the top performers in the league phase. Earlier, from 2008-2010 the top four teams used to play the semi-finals and the finals.
Lawyer, historian and mathematician Kenneth McIntyre was disturbed by this system where the top performers would play knock-outs with lesser performers with one bad day leaving a brilliantly performing team on the wayside. A case in point, India’s performance till 2023 ODI World Cup final.
So, McIntyre developed a four-team algorithm with the aim to retain the drama and the excitement of the knock-outs and also ensure that the top performers in the league are given a “double chance” to be champions.
With this on paper he approached Percy Page, a powerful football administrator in Australia. Page was thoroughly impressed with McIntyre’s pitch and being a life member of the Victorian Football League got it established there in 1931. It continues to be in vogue. In 2011 Australia’s National Rugby League began using the Page-McIntyre system coinciding with the IPL adopting it that year.
The story is not complete without talking about teams ranked three and four. They face a knock-out and if they win, they could win the second qualifier or even the final. There is only one case where this system was turned on its head. In 2016 SRH won the Eliminator against KKR, beat Gujarat Lions in Qualifier 2 and prevailed over RCB in the finals. McIntyre might say this exception proves the rule.
The bottom line: such is the nature of sport.
