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As Suryavanshi cuts a slice of history for himself, fans look to the future 

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As Suryavanshi cuts a slice of history for himself, fans look to the future 


Rajasthan Royals player Vaibhav Suryavanshi during the IPL T20 match against Gujarat Titans at the Sawai Man Singh Stadium in Jaipur on Monday , April 28 2025.
| Photo Credit: R.V. MOORTHY

For half a century, Samastipur in Bihar was best known for the bomb blast that killed India’s then Railway minister. Now a 14-year-old, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, is likely to replace that image. If all goes well, Samastipur will be better known as the birthplace of one of the most remarkable batters to burst into the national consciousness as a teenager.

There is something about six-hitting that immediately focusses attention on a player, guarantees an eager following and fills stadiums. C K Nayudu’s 11 sixes against the MCC hastened India’s Test debut; in the 1970s, a 19-year-old Dilip Vengsarkar hit seven sixes off Bishan Bedi and Erapalli Prasanna in the Irani Trophy to announce his arrival, and on his first tour, Sachin Tendulkar hit Abdul Qadir for four sixes in an over and never looked back.

Say what you want about modern bats, shorter boundaries, fielding and bowling restrictions and good wickets in T20, but for a 14-year-old to hit 11 sixes in a 35-ball century against a top bowling attack is astounding. He mis-hit a couple, which is the modern way, but he also deposited a couple on the roof of the stadium. He has the quality the best have — balance. It enabled him to drive fast bowler Prasidh Krishna over long off in the shot of the day, perhaps of the tournament.

Rajasthan Royals player Vaibhav Suryavanshi during the IPL T20  match against Gujarat Titans at the Sawai Man Singh Stadium in Jaipur on Monday , April 28 2025.

Rajasthan Royals player Vaibhav Suryavanshi during the IPL T20 match against Gujarat Titans at the Sawai Man Singh Stadium in Jaipur on Monday , April 28 2025.
| Photo Credit:
R.V. MOORTHY

Balance, timing, ball sense, confidence (and luck!) — the abstract elements — already exist in Suryavanshi’s game. The rest is a matter of technique and practice. He seems to be a quick learner; uncertainty against the short delivery in earlier games was replaced by an eagerness to smash it out of the ground. Hesitation against spin is making way for decisiveness. Getting down low against spin to cart it over square leg is paying dividends. He played Rashid Khan with respect — but still hit him for a six and a superb straight drive. His jersey flapping in the wind exposing his navel and confirming the puppy fat — all those jalebis, his favourite, must settle somewhere — is a unique sight.

The riches of the game, three formats, wealth, renown, await Suryavanshi. The pressure has just begun. The national selectors must get their timing right. Pick him too early and it might lead to regrets. Too late might snuff out the fire. He has pushed himself into the conversation, though.

The IPL has seen three significant, even great centuries: Brendon McCullum’s 158 in the inaugural match in 2008, Chris Gayle’s 175 in 2013 and now this. The first two were by established players. Each was made by the quintessential IPL batter of his time. Suryavanshi’s century was state-of-the-art batting in the format. Ishant Sharma (199 international matches, 434 wickets) was twice sent into the crowd past midwicket, but he induced one of the many false strokes. By showing the full face of the bat to a slower delivery, Suryavanshi saved himself.

We have to constantly remind ourselves Suryavanshi is only 14, just as in Pakistan all those years ago, we in the media box had to remind ourselves that Tendulkar was only 16. The jokes you now hear were rolled out then. That he was too young to play ODIs because the match went beyond his bed-time; that he needed a letter from his parents to be allowed to fly, and so on. The only new one is that Suryavanshi’s partner needed to cover his eyes every time the cheerleaders went into their act.

Rajasthan Royals player Vaibhav Suryavanshi plays a shot during the IPL T20 cricket match against Gujarat Titans at the Sawai Man Singh Stadium in Jaipur on Monday, April 28, 2025.

Rajasthan Royals player Vaibhav Suryavanshi plays a shot during the IPL T20 cricket match against Gujarat Titans at the Sawai Man Singh Stadium in Jaipur on Monday, April 28, 2025.
| Photo Credit:
R.V. Moorthy

His father Sanjeev has been reported as saying, “The moment I saw him pick up a bat, I realised there is something about him.” He gave up his jewellery business and took to farming to be able to focus on the son’s career. From the age of nine, Suryavanshi was facing fast bowlers with a cricket ball. At 11, he hit a double century in a 40-over match.

Such legends are set to grow. In two directions. Already there is a video online where it appears Suryavanshi might be older than 14. As old as 15, in fact! So perhaps M.S. Dhoni might not be three times his age. It doesn’t matter. Talent met opportunity, as the IPL motto has it. Let’s rejoice; an innings like that is an antidote to cynicism.





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IPL 2025 DC vs KKR | Narine’s triple strike seals the deal as Knight Riders keep hopes alive

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IPL 2025 DC vs KKR | Narine’s triple strike seals the deal as Knight Riders keep hopes alive


There is still life in Kolkata Knight Riders’ IPL title defence. With just three wins in nine matches before Tuesday (April 29, 2025), KKR came into this fixture against Delhi Capitals at the Arun Jaitley Stadium desperately needing to get over the line. The visiting team did just that by clinching a 14-run win that consigned Capitals to its third defeat in four matches in the national capital. After racking up 204 for nine, KKR restricted the host to 190 for nine with Sunil Narine working his magic.

The pendulum swung multiple times during Capitals’ chase. KKR had the ascendancy after striking thrice within the first seven overs, particularly with K.L. Rahul’s run-out from a direct hit. Along with Axar Patel, though, Faf du Plessis stitched together a 76-run stand and kept his team in the fray.

Just when DC seemed to be nudging ahead — it needed 75 runs from the final seven overs — the guile and game-sense of Narine came to the fore. Having been belted for a six by Axar off the first ball of the 14th over, he pulled his length back ever so slightly and drew the left-hander into skewing a lofted shot to Harshit Rana at covers. The mystery spinner castled Tristan Stubbs four balls later before getting rid of du Plessis in his next over. He finished with figures of 4-0-29-3. Anukul Roy and Varun Chakaravarthy too played their part in the win.

At the halfway stage, KKR’s batters must have had mixed feelings about their effort. While a rollicking start allowed the men in purple and gold to zoom to 79 for one at the end of the PowerPlay, there were many more runs they could have scored in the back end to take the game away from DC’s reach. Angkrish’s Raghuvanshi’s 44 was the highest score, with most of the other batters frittering away quickfire starts.

DC’s bowlers did their bit. Spinners Axar and Vipraj Nigam claimed two each while Mitchell Starc came away with three wickets. In the 20th over, Starc dismissed Rovman Powell and Anukul, thanks to a screamer by Dushmantha Chameera at deep backward square leg, off consecutive balls. Andre Russell was then run out to make it a hat-trick of wickets for DC. It wasn’t enough on the night for the home team though.

SCOREBOARD

KOLKATA KNIGHT RIDERS

Rahmanullah Gurbaz c Porel b Starc 26 (12b, 5×4, 1×6), Sunil Narine lbw b Vipraj 27 (16b, 2×4, 2×6), Ajinkya Rahane lbw b Axar 26 (14b, 4×4, 1×6), Angkrish Raghuvanshi c Karun b Chameera 44 (32b, 3×4, 2×6), Venkatesh Iyer c Vipraj b Axar 7 (5b, 1×4), Rinku Singh c Starc b Vipraj 36 (25b, 3×4, 1×6), Andre Russell run out 17 (9b, 2×4, 1×6), Rovman Powell lbw b Starc 5 (5b, 1×4), Anukul Roy c Chameera b Starc 0 (1b), Harshit Rana (not out) 0 (1b), Varun Chakaravarthy (not out) 1 (1b); Extras (lb-3, nb-1, w-11): 15; Total (for nine wkts. in 20 overs): 204.

FALL OF WICKETS

1-48 (Gurbaz, 2.6 overs), 2-85 (Narine, 6.4), 3-91 (Rahane, 7.2), 4-113 (Venkatesh, 9.2), 5-174 (Raghuvanshi, 16.5), 6-177 (Rinku, 17.3), 7-203 (Powell, 19.3), 8-203 (Anukul, 19.4), 9-203 (Russell, 19.5).

CAPITALS BOWLING

Starc 4-0-43-3, Chameera 3-0-46-1, Mukesh 2-0-17-0, Vipraj 4-0-41-2, Axar 4-0-27-2, Kuldeep 3-0-27-0.

DELHI CAPITALS

Abishek Porel c Russell b Anukul 4 (2b, 1×4), Faf du Plessis c Rinku b Narine 62 (45b, 7×4, 2×6), Karun Nair lbw b Vaibhav 15 (13b, 2×4), K.L. Rahul run out 7 (5b, 1×4), Axar Patel c Harshit b Narine 43 (23b, 4×4, 3×6), Tristan Stubbs b Narine 1 (3b), Vipraj Nigam b Russell 38 (19b, 5×4, 2×6), Ashutosh Sharma (Impact Player for Mukesh) c Narine b Varun 7 (6b, 1×6), Mitchell Starc c Gurbaz b Varun 0 (1b), Dushmantha Chameera (not out) 2 (3b), Kuldeep Yadav (not out) 1 (1b); Extras (b-5, nb-1, w-4): 10; Total (for nine wkts. in 20 overs): 190.

FALL OF WICKETS

1-4 (Porel, 0.2), 2-43 (Karun, 4.3), 3-60 (Rahul, 6.3), 4-136 (Axar, 13.2), 5-138 (Stubbs, 13.6), 6-146 (du Plessis, 15.2), 7-160 (Ashutosh, 17.2), 8-160 (Starc, 17.3), 9-189 (Vipraj, 19.5).

KNIGHT RIDERS BOWLING

Anukul 4-0-27-1, Vaibhav (Impact Player for Venkatesh) 2-0-19-1, Harshit 4-0-49-0, Varun 4-0-39-2, Narine 4-0-29-3, Russell 2-0-22-1.

Toss: DC; PoM: Narine.

KKR won by 14 runs.



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IPL 2025: Delhi Capitals’ home troubles continue as Kolkata Knight Riders keep themselves alive – The Times of India

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IPL 2025: Delhi Capitals’ home troubles continue as Kolkata Knight Riders keep themselves alive – The Times of India


KKR players celebrate after taking a DC wicket. (Pic credit: IPL)

Delhi Capitals suffered their second straight defeat of the Indian Premier League (IPL) season, going down by 14-runs to Kolkata Knight Riders at the Arun Jaitley Stadium on Tuesday evening.
With the win, KKR snapped their three-match winless streak, remained seventh in the standings, and kept their slim hopes of qualifying for the playoffs alive. DC, meanwhile, remain rooted to fourth place, having been subjected to their third home defeat in the capital after four matches.
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Opening troubles continue for KKR
Kolkata Knight Riders persisted with the pairing of Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Sunil Narine at the top of the order as Quinton de Kock continued to warm the bench for an unchanged side. While they did stitch the defending champions’ highest opening wicket partnership of the season, it amounted to just 48 runs. It kept the record of KKR being the only franchise to not post a 50-plus stand at the top of the batting.
Who’s that IPL player?
To be fair to KKR and Gurbaz, it took something special from Abishek Porel, behind the stumps, to bring up the wicket. The 22-year-old plucked a neat low catch after moving to his right and got his gloves underneath for a safe pair of hands.
Venkatesh Iyer’s troubling season
Venkatesh Iyer, KKR’s big buy at Rs 23.75 crore, continued to struggle this IPL season. After clobbering 404 and 370 runs, respectively, in the last two seasons, he’s mustered only 142 runs so far after seven innings. He has averaged only 20.29 and scored at a strike rate of 139.22.
On Tuesday he fell to a nothing shot: swiped across the line to an angling ball from Axar Patel, got the bottom end of the bat and handed a simple take to Vipraj Nigam at cover.
The left-hander has scored four single-digit scores this season and been sent back four times without even facing 10 balls. If you need the math, Iyer’s got 6 runs for every crore that the franchise spent on him.

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Will Kolkata Knight Riders make the playoffs this season?

Big start, slow finish
Despite the opening-wicket troubles, KKR had a strong start at the top. They took only 3.4 overs for their fifty – their fastest team fifty this IPL season. They raced off to 79 after the powerplay overs – their second-best powerplay show this season.
However, their close to the innings didn’t meet the desired flourish. Even though Rinku Singh and Angkrish Raghuvanshi put together 61 runs from 46 balls in the middle, only 45 runs came in the final five overs.
When Raghuvanshi and Rinku departed in quick succession, with just six balls between them, KKR lost momentum and scored 204/9 – helped in part by Andre Russell’s last-over six that almost smashed a window. DC pulled things back with three consecutive wickets in Mitchell Starc‘s final over.
DC’s woes against spin
Delhi Capitals had come into the match as one of the teams that had struggled significantly against spin. They had conceded 23 wickets to spin bowlers, only fewer than Chennai Super Kings (26) and level with Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
They bow out of their latest fixture as the team that has struggled the most against spin with that number ballooning to 29 wickets. Varun Chakaravarthy (2/39), Sunil Narine (3/29) and Anukul Roy (1/27) became the trio that hurt them this time.

Shah Rukh Khan: The superstar who turned IPL into a blockbuster

Narine – leader and game-changer
In a game of small margins and every ball presenting an opportunity, Narine’s third and fourth made the big difference. With Axar Patel and Faf du Plessis going guns blazing and steering DC towards a possible win, he stepped up and took Axar out first and then Faf to extinguish DC’s chances of a win.
If that wasn’t enough, he stepped up as captain with Ajinkya Rahane going off the field to tend to an injury. As far as making your experience count, Narine did that and more!





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PV Sindhu and HS Prannoy disappoint as India’s run in Sudirman Cup faces group-stage exit | Badminton News – The Times of India

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PV Sindhu and HS Prannoy disappoint as India’s run in Sudirman Cup faces group-stage exit | Badminton News – The Times of India


NEW DELHI: India’s campaign at the BWF Sudirman Cup Finals came to an end following a 1-3 defeat to Indonesia in their group D encounter on Tuesday.
After their earlier 1-4 loss to Denmark on Sunday, India needed a victory to remain in contention for the knockout stage. Their upcoming match against England, who are also eliminated, holds no significance now.
Indonesia and Denmark secured their spots in the knockout phase with two consecutive victories each.
Denmark confirmed their progression with a 5-0 win over England on Tuesday.
India faced a crucial match, requiring a win to stay alive in the tournament, but found themselves overwhelmed by their higher-ranked opponents.
The continuing poor performances of their leading singles players, Prannoy and Sindhu, proved costly for the team.
Both Sindhu and Prannoy had previously suffered defeats in their singles matches against Denmark.
The Indian team began positively when Dhruv Kapila and Tanisha Crasto secured a hard-fought victory in mixed doubles against Rehan Naufal Kusharjanto and Gloria Emanuelle Widjala 10-21 21-18 21-19, in a contest lasting one hour and 10 minutes.
In the women’s singles, two-time Olympic medallist Sindhu, currently ranked 18th, showed no signs of improvement as she went down 12-21 13-21 to world number 11 Putri Kusuma Wardani in 38 minutes, despite having beaten the Indonesian twice previously.
With the tie balanced at 1-1, Prannoy faced Jonatan Christie and claimed the first game 21-19. However, the world number six Indonesian dominated the subsequent games, winning 21-14 21-12 against the 30th-ranked Indian.
The women’s doubles combination of Priya Konjengbam and Shruti Mishra suffered a decisive 10-21 9-21 loss to Lanny Tria Mayasari and Siti Fadia Silva Ramadhanti.





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