IPL 2026: Magic of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi- no fear, no baggage, no hesitation

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 Magic of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi- no fear, no baggage, no hesitation

Fifteen-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi stunned Pat Cummins and SRH's bowling attack with a blistering 97 off 29 balls. (AP Photo)

NEW CHANDIGARH: Pat Cummins had a plan. He’s Pat Cummins, multiple World Cup winner, one of the shrewdest operators the game has produced, a man who has spent a career thinking two steps ahead.

Before the IPL Eliminator, he would have sat in meetings, reviewed footage and drawn margins around what he could and couldn’t do.Vaibhav Sooryavanshi walked out at the Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Stadium here on Wednesday evening and turned Cummins’s plans, and SRH’s entire bowling attack, into something resembling a video game simulation.Twenty-nine balls, 97 runs, 12 sixes. A strike rate of 334.48.

Sooryavanshi batted like he had never been told what is impossible. That, perhaps, is the most startling thing about him. Not the 97 off 29, not the 12 sixes, not even the audacity of taking on Cummins as if he were a club bowler serving gentle throwdowns. The complete absence of baggage in his batting is a highlight.

No hesitation. No inherited fear. No reverence once the bowler starts running in.Fifteen-year-olds are supposed to be intimidated by packed stadiums and elite fast bowling. They are supposed to survive tournaments, not dominate them. Sooryavanshi, meanwhile, has made 680 runs at a strike rate touching 243 and broken Chris Gayle’s record for most sixes in an IPL season. His Rajasthan Royals teammate Dhruv Jurel put it perfectly, saying, “When we go to an academy, we’re told, ‘don’t watch the bowler, watch the ball’.

As 17-year-olds, we always watch the bowler. But really, Sooryavanshi just watches the ball. That’s all. His mantra is ‘I don’t give a damn about any bowler’. He just wants to play the ball.”Names like Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj, Josh Hazlewood, Kagiso Rabada and Pat Cummins, to Sooryavanshi, are simply men running towards him with a ball. Their reputations are irrelevant.“The best thing about Vaibhav that I have noticed is that he doesn’t plan anything because he practices a lot and he always backs himself.

That’s what he does every time he goes out and plays. He doesn’t even have a shadow of doubt that ‘I am not able to do it’,” Jurel added.James Franklin, SRH’s assistant coach, said, “I don’t think anyone’s ever seen a talent like this. It’s freakish what he is doing at the moment. To think that he has potentially got 25 years left in a career is quite scary. And he is only going to get better,” Franklin said.When Sooryavanshi was asked about his 97 — about falling three runs short of what would have been the fastest century in IPL history — he was entirely unbothered.

“My only focus was on contributing as much as I could because centuries will keep happening. Right now the focus is on how to win the trophy,” he said.Interestingly, Royals skipper Riyan Parag underlined the management philosophy for Sooryavanshi: do nothing, leave him alone and let him have fun. “We don’t have any conversations,” Parag said. “He likes batting, so we get him a lot of batting practice at the nets and stuff like that.

And then he goes out and does his thing.”India has a habit of turning gifted teenagers into national obsessions before they have learned how to breathe between innings. The noise will only grow louder after this IPL. Maybe, the real task for the stakeholders of Indian cricket is to preserve Sooryavanshi’s unburdened approach to the game.

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