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#IPL #Virat #Kohli #signs #Vaibhav #Suryavanshis #cap #leaves #heartfelt #message">IPL 2026: Virat Kohli signs Vaibhav Suryavanshi’s cap, leaves heartfelt message It is difficult to not be completely awestruck while looking at Vaibhav Suryavanshi go about his business.
On Friday, he struck a 15-ball half-century against Royal Challengers Bengaluru at the Barsapara Stadium in Guwahati, equalling his own record for the joint second-fastest fifty, which he had scored against Chennai Super Kings earlier this season.
Led by the teenage prodigy’s innings, Rajasthan put up 97 runs in the first six, the side’s best haul in the PowerPlay.
Suryavanshi eventually perished on 78 off 26 balls, holing out to long-on while trying to pick another boundary off Krunal Pandya. But the knock was enough to take him to the top of the Orange Cap standings, at 200 runs from just four innings.
However, that perhaps wasn’t the most valuable cap in his possession last night. After the game, which the Royals won by six wickets, former India skipper Virat Kohli was seen interacting with Suryavanshi.
Not just that, it was later revealed that the batting great, in fact, ended up signing Suryavanshi’s cap with a note that read: “Dear Vaibhav, well done.”
A priceless piece of memorabilia that Vaibhav would perhaps choose to treasure his entire life.
Published on Apr 11, 2026
It is difficult to not be completely awestruck while looking at Vaibhav Suryavanshi go about…
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#Method #mayhem #Vaibhav #Suryavanshi #dangerous #IPL">Method behind the mayhem — What makes Vaibhav Suryavanshi so dangerous in IPL 2026?
There is a temptation, with innings like Vaibhav Suryavanshi’s 78 off 26 against Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), to reduce them to spectacle. Suryavanshi resists that simplification, even on a night that invites it.
In the penultimate over of the PowerPlay against RCB in Guwahati on Friday, he had just taken Bhuvneshwar Kumar for two successive sixes to bring up a half-century off 15 balls. And then came the fifth ball, quieter, almost incongruous.
A slower delivery, on a length, on middle and leg. Suryavanshi checked himself and played it back down the pitch. It was a small act of restraint. When the pace came off, so did his bat speed. It is not the absence of premeditation that stands out, but the ability to abandon it, mid-thought, mid-swing.
The next ball was short, and he created room to ramp it over short third man for four. But the previous delivery lingered, as such moments often do. This was not instinct alone operating at high speed, but perception keeping pace with it.
His eventual score, at a strike rate touching 300, powered Rajasthan Royals to 129 for two in 8.1 overs in a chase of 202. Eight fours and seven sixes told one version of the innings.
The other lay in how early he has been imposing himself, and against whom, as if reputations were merely details to be worked around. The first time he faced Jasprit Bumrah, he hit him for six. Against Josh Hazlewood, it was four, then more fours, then a six.
Alongside him, Yashasvi Jaiswal ensures that Rajasthan Royals is rarely asked to build. Suryavanshi is enabled to accelerate rather than rebuild, to press where others might pause.
ALSO READ: Anil Kumble compares Suryavanshi to Tendulkar but urges caution amidst India call-up chatter
Across three innings this season, 52 off 17 against Chennai Super Kings, 39 off 14 against Mumbai Indians, and now 78 off 26, the consistency lies not just in scoring rate but in clarity. He arrives with a map of options, but one that remains provisional to what the ball demands, revised ball by ball.
The question is not whether he can dominate an over. It is whether this clarity survives when bowlers stop missing, when the game slows just enough to demand a different kind of patience.
For now, Suryavanshi is not merely overwhelming attacks. He is reading them, adjusting to them, and making even the most established names look, briefly, reactive.
Published on Apr 11, 2026
There is a temptation, with innings like Vaibhav Suryavanshi’s 78 off 26 against Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), to reduce them to spectacle. Suryavanshi resists that simplification, even on a night that invites it.
In the penultimate over of the PowerPlay against RCB in Guwahati on Friday, he had just taken Bhuvneshwar Kumar for two successive sixes to bring up a half-century off 15 balls. And then came the fifth ball, quieter, almost incongruous.
A slower delivery, on a length, on middle and leg. Suryavanshi checked himself and played it back down the pitch. It was a small act of restraint. When the pace came off, so did his bat speed. It is not the absence of premeditation that stands out, but the ability to abandon it, mid-thought, mid-swing.
The next ball was short, and he created room to ramp it over short third man for four. But the previous delivery lingered, as such moments often do. This was not instinct alone operating at high speed, but perception keeping pace with it.
His eventual score, at a strike rate touching 300, powered Rajasthan Royals to 129 for two in 8.1 overs in a chase of 202. Eight fours and seven sixes told one version of the innings.
The other lay in how early he has been imposing himself, and against whom, as if reputations were merely details to be worked around. The first time he faced Jasprit Bumrah, he hit him for six. Against Josh Hazlewood, it was four, then more fours, then a six.
Alongside him, Yashasvi Jaiswal ensures that Rajasthan Royals is rarely asked to build. Suryavanshi is enabled to accelerate rather than rebuild, to press where others might pause.
ALSO READ: Anil Kumble compares Suryavanshi to Tendulkar but urges caution amidst India call-up chatter
Across three innings this season, 52 off 17 against Chennai Super Kings, 39 off 14 against Mumbai Indians, and now 78 off 26, the consistency lies not just in scoring rate but in clarity. He arrives with a map of options, but one that remains provisional to what the ball demands, revised ball by ball.
The question is not whether he can dominate an over. It is whether this clarity survives when bowlers stop missing, when the game slows just enough to demand a different kind of patience.
For now, Suryavanshi is not merely overwhelming attacks. He is reading them, adjusting to them, and making even the most established names look, briefly, reactive.
Published on Apr 11, 2026
There is a temptation, with innings like Vaibhav Suryavanshi’s 78 off 26 against Royal Challengers…