DC Editor | Vaibhav: New Kids on the Street

collision! Prosperity! Bang! Pop Group Roxette’s emotional soft numbers get pretty rough when you’re in the backdrop of Vaibhav Suryavanshi, a new kid in the Indian cricket neighborhood. Because the 14-year-old is more of a heavy metal performer, his bats rattle like the guitars of those tenacious people.
Bihar’s batsman has indeed proved his courage on the big stage, with Rajasthan Royals against the Gujarat Titans making him the youngest centurion in the Indian Premier League. The whirlwind of 35-ball knocks, including 11 sixes, made his century the second fastest in his century, the Indians beat (15-year-old) a record bigger than him. He accumulated 94 of the 101 boundaries, just an eloquent pointer to Suryavanshi’s excellent skills.
Facing baby Vaibhav is younger than the league – he was born three years after IPL in 2008. But his age did not show when the cracked child would crease, holding a bat in his hand. He plays like a professional – no nerves, no fear. His bowling competition with international class did not stop the whip from waving the willows to illustrate the effect, but instead swung hard on their drowsy faces. This self-confidence and self-confidence attitude earned honors everywhere and positioned him as one of the future.
In many ways, the brilliantly talented Vaibhav represents a new India in which the accomplished people draw their own paths without getting stuck with tradition and history. The rupees selected at the IPL auction are over Rs 10 million, and early bleeding to break the barriers is truly special.
One hopes it can dabble in other forms of games that India likes – tests and one-day international competitions – which will likely throw this sentence out of the window, the way the kid plays.