History made in IPL as Shastri forecasts next challenge for Suryavanshi
India legend Ravi Shastri discussed the impressive teenager on the most recent episode of The ICC Review and looked at what may lie ahead for the 14-year-old.
History was made in the Indian Premier League (IPL) on Monday when 14-year-old sensation Vaibhav Suryavanshi smashed a sensational century for the Rajasthan Royals.
Suryavanshi became the youngest player to score a T20 century with his innings of 101 in an eight-wicket victory for the Royals against Gujarat Titans, with the left-hander eclipsing the previous record held by Maharashtra’s Vijay Zol, who had scored a hundred at the age of 18 years and 118 days.
Youngest to score a T20 1⃣0⃣0⃣ ✅
— IndianPremierLeague (@IPL) April 28, 2025
Fastest TATA IPL hundred by an Indian ✅
Second-fastest hundred in TATA IPL ✅
Vaibhav Suryavanshi, TAKE. A. BOW 🙇 ✨
Updates ▶ https://t.co/HvqSuGgTlN#TATAIPL | #RRvGT | @rajasthanroyals pic.twitter.com/sn4HjurqR6
The teenager smashed seven fours and 11 sixes during his 38-ball innings, with his century coming from just 35 deliveries and the second fastest in the history of the IPL, only behind Chris Gayle's 30-ball effort.
Fastest centuries in IPL history
PLAYER | DELIVERIES |
Chris Gayle | 30 |
Vaibhav Suryavanshi | 35 |
Yusuf Pathan | 37 |
David Miller | 38 |
Travis Head | 39 |
It was only Suryavanshi's third innings in the IPL, with the opener having impressed earlier in the tournament and catching Ravi Shastri’s eye when he hit his first ball for six and scored 34 against the Lucknow Super Giants.
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Shastri spoke glowingly of the bevy of young openers on display in the IPL this year on the latest episode of The ICC Review and admitted he had been in awe of how Suryavanshi had commenced his cricketing career.
"I think the first shot he ever played (against Lucknow), that would have taken everyone's breath away," Shastri told host Sanjana Ganesan on The ICC Review.
"But he's young, just let him play. I would say just let him play a bit because it's at that age, there's bound to be failure as well.
"It's how he handles failure, as people will come up with new things."
Shastri believes bowlers will target Suryavanshi with some short-pitched deliveries in the future and the real test will come with how he responds.
"There'll be lots of short stuff thrown at him the next time he comes out to bat because when you tonk someone's first ball for six, then you show no mercy," he said.
"Then you don't care whether he's 14 years old or 12 years old or 20 years old.
"The menu is the same that you dish out. So, he'll have to get used to that and once we see him handling that then you can make a proper judgement."