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Sai Sudharsan — the perfect sync between consistency and authority

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Sai Sudharsan — the perfect sync between consistency and authority


It might still be early days, but this edition of the Indian Premier League is already fast becoming the Season of the 20-something left-handers.

Ahead of double-header Sunday (April 13), a 29-year-old from Trinidad & Tobago (Nicholas Pooran) helmed the run-making charts while a 20-year-old from Khost in Afghanistan (Noor Ahmad) wore the Purple Cap. Two of the three hundreds of Season 18 have come from the scything willows of 24-year-olds (Priyansh Arya and, famously on Saturday night, Abhishek Sharma), the third from a 26-year-old seasoned campaigner on the international comeback trail (Ishan Kishan). Left certainly has been overwhelmingly right.

Add to this flamboyant bunch – and make no mistake, this is a largely flamboyant bunch of batters to whom hitting sixes is second nature, complemented by a left-arm wrist-spinner who, even if he wanted to be, couldn’t be anything but flamboyant – a quiet, understated rangy 23-year-old left-hander from Chennai who cries out for attention not with flashy earrings and outlandish gestures but with the simplicity of his 
strokeplay, at once effortless and breathtaking.

Answering to the name of B. Sai Sudharsan, the Gujarat Titans opener is engaged in a gripping battle with Pooran for the race to the Orange Cap. The symbol of supremacy when it comes to run-making in the IPL has changed hands more than once and is currently in the possession of the Caribbean charmer. But while the Orange Cap will be a welcome addition to his kitbag, Sudharsan’s primary focus is not on the slice of individual glory. The larger cause, team success, resonates with him; he was part of the squad (but not the XI) that won its maiden final on debut in 2022, top-scored with 96 in the last-ball loss to Chennai Super Kings in the title clash 12 months later and has been one of their more consistent performers in the last four seasons. Now armed with a maturity that goes well beyond his biological age, it sets him up as potentially one for the future from a leadership perspective too.

Nip and tuck

Pooran and Sudharsan have been engaged in a fabulous battle of nip-and-tuck in the race for top run-making honours. The far more explosive Trinidadian leads the way with 349 runs from six innings at an average and a strike-rate superior to Sudharsan. Where the latter averages 54.83 and strikes at 151.61 per 100 runs scored (he has 329 runs, also from six innings), Pooran’s  corresponding numbers are 69.80 and 215.43 respectively. The older batter has smashed 31 sixes (just one fewer than Chennai Super Kings’ entire team tally at the conclusion of their sixth game) to Sudharsan’s 13 but then again, this isn’t a battle between 
Pooran and Sudharsan, this isn’t a comparison of who is more valuable to their team.

For starters, Pooran strides out at No. 3, behind the aggressive opening pair of Mitchell Marsh and Aiden 
Markram, with Lucknow Super Giants packing most of their explosive power in the top half of their batting order. New skipper Rishabh Pant has yet to catch fire but behind Pooran, there is no shortage of batting muscle – Ayush Badoni, David Miller, Abdul Samad. This is a fearsome group of ball-strikers in a tournament where every team, with the exception of CSK, seems to have assiduously assembled fearsome groups of ball-strikers.

Gujarat Titans aren’t an exception, by any stretch of the imagination. On paper, they might not appear to possess the same depth when it comes to scoring rapidly but of their six batters who have faced at least 30 balls this season, skipper Shubman Gill’s strike rate of 149.64 is the least. One would think that in a line-up that, Gill apart, boasts Jos Buttler,  Sherfane Rutherford and Shahrukh Khan, Sudharsan would be the fulcrum around whom the rest would operate. But astonishingly, for want of a better word, it is the Tamil Nadu left-hander who tops the boundary-hitting charts for his franchise, with 31 fours and 13 sixes from 217 deliveries faced.

Sudharsan’s IPLcareer graph is the perfect illustration of how to marry consistency with authority, how to make the most of experience gained and situations encountered, how to keep growing better and better and finding novel methods of keeping oneself a step ahead of the opposition in these days of constant scrutiny and supreme dependence on data and analytics. Each edition of the IPL has been more fruitful numerically than the previous one – he is now in his fourth season – but more than the quantum of runs, it is the manner in which he has made them that has been impressive.

It is inevitable that batters will need to improvise – some might point to Virat Kohli, unfairly, and say that he is pretty much the poster boy for batting orthodoxly in 20-over cricket without any drop in returns or efficacy but the former Indian skipper can’t be the norm in any cricketing discussion — in the T20 format, and especially those who have cut their teeth bang in the middle of the 20-over revolution, unlike a Kohli. Sudarshan is nearly a decade and a half younger than Kohli and therefore is more of an offspring of the 20-over revolution than Kohli will ever be, but that doesn’t mean that he goes to the reverse sweep or the switch hit at the drop of a hat.

In Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s first home game of the season on April 2, Sai Sudharsan made a polished 49 at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium on April 2, one of the driving forces behind his team’s nonchalant assault on the hosts’ 169 for eight. During his time in the middle until he ceded centre-stage to Buttler and Rutherford, Sai Sudharsan lit up the venue with several wondrous strokes. There were muscular pulls and rasping square-cuts; his only six came when he walked across his stumps and paddled a full, fast ball from Josh Hazlewood to fine-leg for six. It was a terrific piece of improvisation, bold and adventurous and a grand example of the spectrum that traverses risk and reward. But the connoisseurs who watched that game at the ground and on television would have been delighted at Sudharsan’s choice of the stroke that had given him the greatest joy.

Subliminal effect

That came a ball after the six. Somewhat overcompensating for having bowled so full and on leg, Hazlewood pulled his length back and sent down a good delivery, potentially headed to the top of the off-stump. Sudharsan was prepared. An initial movement translated into a forward press and he punched the ball on the up past the Aussie quick, sending it racing off the pitch to the straight boundary with minimal effort and subliminal effect. It was a stroke that had ‘class’ written all over it, class that has been Sudharsan
 ally for a long time now.

This season, Sudharsan has four half-centuries and the aforementioned 49 from six innings. If that’s not a sign of consistency, then little else is. Despite all this, he may not be even close to the fringes of the Indian T20 team, such is the depth that Ajit Agarkar and Suryakumar Yadav and Gautam Gambhir can pick from. The queue, especially within the batting community, to break into the T20 set-up is long, winding, seemingly endless. Sudharsan is smart enough to understand the futility of trying to second-guess the decision-makers, of the follies of attempting to figure out if he has done enough to catch and then hold their attention. In his head, that is not even his brief; that revolves around scoring runs of import and impact, of making runs that matter, that buttress the team’s cause rather than his own CV and runbank alone.

“It’s my fourth year (in the IPL and with GT), it has given me a lot of experience. I got exposed to a few difficult conditions, I got exposed to a lot of quick bowling in the nets. The most important thing which has helped my evolution or the way I’ve improved my T20 batting is the game time I get here and the practice time I get here with the Titans — with all quality bowlers, all international bowlers, Sudharsan acknowledged the other day.

“That has helped me even from the nets; I’ve learnt a lot in these three years. And obviously, playing for India, that has helped me even more to understand the game better and the basics of the game as well.” Sudharsan has played three One-Day Internationals, all in South Africa in December 2023, making half-centuries in his first two appearances. He didn’t bat in his only T20I, against Zimbabwe in Harare last July, but was in the India ‘A’ squad that travelled to Australia last hundred and produced a sparkling 103 in the second innings of the first unofficial ‘Test’ against the hosts in Mackay. Surprisingly for someone with such strong grounding in the basics, very good awareness of where his off-stump is and more than decent technique, he only averages 39.93 in 29 first-class games when he is clearly much, much better than those numbers would suggest.

India travel to England for five Tests, the first of them at Headingley from June 20, in the build-up to which the ‘A’ team will play two four-day games, starting in Canterbury on May 30.

Unless things go horribly wrong, Sai Sudharsan should be on the flight to the English capital sometime towards the third or so week of May, hoping to build on the gains of Australia and hoping to stay in the consciousness of the national selectors. India showed by plucking Devdutt Padikkal from the ‘A’ squad and fielding him in the XI in Perth Test ahead of reserve opener Abhimanyu Easwaran that they are prepared to look beyond the Bengal captain. Maybe in that lies Sudharsan’s chance to stake his claim. Quietly and without fuss, of course.



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Formula One 2025 | Tell-tale signs — who’s hot, who’s not and the road ahead

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The Formula One caravan has had a busy season, completing five races in the space of six weeks. With nearly one-fifth of the 24-race calendar done, the championship battle is heating up nicely as just 12 points separate the top three drivers in the standings.

The Hindu examines some of the key trends that have emerged so far.

Oscar lays down the marker

Despite winning two races in his sophomore campaign last year, doubts remained about how good Oscar Piastri was.

Saudi GP winner Oscar Piastri celebrates on the podium.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

The Aussie showed improvement last year, working on his weakness in tyre management, but he was still well short of teammate Lando Norris’ level. The qualifying performance, in particular, was a concern. However, his consistent results in the race ensured McLaren clinched the constructors’ title.

Coming into the season, many wondered how good the Australian was and if he could take another giant step, or if the improvement curve would show signs of flattening. Five races in, few would have expected Piastri to be leading the championship and winning a majority of the races (three).

The 24-year-old has clearly taken a step forward in qualifying, clinching pole position in two events and finishing within a tenth of a second of the pole-sitter in the other three. Besides Suzuka, where he was third on the grid, Piastri has been on the front row in the other four rounds.

While he cruised to victory in China and Bahrain from pole, his most recent win in Saudi Arabia showed that he is well-prepared for a long and gruelling title campaign.

Although he underperformed in qualifying, losing pole to Max Verstappen, Piastri was aggressive on the opening lap and could have taken the lead had the former not committed a tactical foul by running wide into turn one, which allowed him to stay ahead. Once the stewards handed Verstappen a five-second penalty, Piastri inherited the lead after the pit stops and kept the reigning champion at arm’s length for the rest of the race.

By being decisive in his battle against Verstappen, who is known for his aggressive wheel-to-wheel racing, Piastri has laid down a marker and shown that he won’t be bullied by the four-time champion.

Piastri now has a 10-point lead over teammate Norris and 12 over Verstappen and has the wind in his sails.

Since his costly mistake in the opening race on home soil in Melbourne when he spun out in wet conditions from second to ninth, Piastri has come back strongly, displaying great mental fortitude. Overturning a 23-point deficit to Norris in the next four rounds is a testament to his steely resolve.

At the same time, the Aussie will also know he underachieved in Japan and Jeddah. By qualifying third in Suzuka after fluffing his final lap of qualifying, he had to settle for the final step of the podium on a weekend when he was probably the quickest driver.

Despite his lead, in a long season, these errors could add up, and Piastri will be well aware of the areas of improvement. And if the first two years are anything to go by, the Aussie has demonstrated time and again that he is a quick learner.

Norris’ struggles

While Piastri leads the standings, his teammate Norris has had a far tougher start to the year, which has once again raised questions about his abilities and if he has what it takes to become a champion.

Though the British driver has won a race and is just 10 points behind, he has not been comfortable with the traits of the McLaren. Norris, who gave a good fight to Verstappen last year, was expected to lead his team’s charge. Especially considering McLaren has the fastest machinery, many believed this would be the 25-year-old’s best chance to win a title.

And when he produced a dominant display in Melbourne, winning from pole in a wet race where conditions were treacherous at times, it reiterated his credentials as the favourite for the title.

However, since then, Norris has had some sub-par weekends where he has struggled to match his teammate. He had a tough outing in China, and not nailing his lap in qualifying in Japan meant he had to settle for second behind Verstappen. Bahrain was his worst weekend, as he qualified sixth and made a mess at the start, which earned him a penalty before he recovered to finish third. There are also concerns about his ability to handle pressure when the stakes get high. In Jeddah, Norris made the most costly error of the season, crashing out in qualifying on a weekend when he was comfortably quicker than Piastri.

McLaren driver Lando Norris’ car is carried out of the track after crashing during the qualifying session ahead of the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
| Photo Credit:
AP

It meant he had to start from 10th and managed to finish only fourth. His struggles in passing Lewis Hamilton also probably cost him a podium.

In contrast, Piastri dispatched the Ferrari driver easily with a bold move when the latter least expected it, and it proved decisive in securing the race win. In a tight battle, these small things can have a significant impact.

Norris needs to use this two-week break to do some soul searching and also find a way to get to grips with his McLaren. When the caravan reassembles in Miami, Norris will hope to reignite his season at the track where he scored his maiden Grand Prix win last year.

Max Magic

In every sport, there are periods in which an athlete seems invincible. In modern F1, Verstappen is currently operating in a zone where he is extracting every ounce of himself and the car to stay in the title battle, despite his Red Bull not currently matching McLaren’s outright pace.

The Dutchman has already produced sensational qualifying laps to take pole position twice and won a race in Suzuka with his sheer genius work on Saturday. Even as Red Bull trails McLaren by a whopping 99 points, Verstappen is only 12 points behind Piastri in the drivers’ standings as he pursues a fifth-straight drivers’ title.

Max Verstappen on track during the Japanese GP.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

The Red Bull is a capricious car in the way it handles, and yet the 27-year-old is somehow not only taming it but also managing to extract results that most others can’t imagine, scoring 87 of the team’s 89 points.

The big unknown right now is how long Verstappen can continue this and whether it is sustainable. Tracks like Suzuka and Jeddah flattered Red Bull’s performance, considering the layout and temperatures helped them mask some of their weaknesses.

If the energy-drink giant fails to develop a car that allows Verstappen to defend his title, there is also a possibility that he could leave the team despite having a contract until 2028. If it happens, it could be a massive blow for the team, considering no other driver can do what Verstappen is managing.

Trouble in Maranello

Last year, Ferrari pulled off a coup when it snapped up Hamilton from Mercedes and then almost won the constructors’ title, falling short by just 14 points. The Italian marque had a great end to the season in 2024, consistently fighting at the sharp end of the grid. The expectation was that the Scuderia could build on this and start strongly in its bid to fight for the title, ending a 17-year drought.

However, it has not been smooth sailing for the Prancing Horse as the team is stuck in a no-man’s land. It is the fourth-fastest car on the grid, unable to fight for a top-three position and well clear of the midfield pack.

The Rosso corsa-coloured cars have a lot of catching up to do. The way it has lost performance compared to the other top teams has been puzzling and raises questions about the team’s capabilities in building a car that can fight for titles.

Charles Leclerc, at least, gave something for the tifosi to cheer for when he clinched the team’s first podium in Jeddah. It was a superbly executed drive, running long on the first set of tyres and then managing to keep the faster Norris at bay towards the closing stages.

While Leclerc has still managed to get some good results, Hamilton has had a rough start to the season. When the seven-time champion won the sprint race in China in only his second appearance, there was much excitement and the promise of more good times, but it seems to have been just a flash in the pan. Since then, it has been a hiding to nothing for the most decorated driver in history as he has struggled massively compared to his teammate.

Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton ahead of the Saudi Arabian GP.
| Photo Credit:
REUTERS

Hamilton’s aura has been somewhat diminished since 2022, when the new regulations took effect. He was shaded by teammate George Russell in Mercedes last year. The feeling was that the Mercedes did not suit his style, and a change of scenery could rejuvenate the 40-year-old.

Unfortunately, Hamilton cut a forlorn picture in Saudi and indicated that he doesn’t see any light at the end of the tunnel. “At the moment, there’s no fix. So this is how it’s going to be for the rest of the year. It’s going to be painful,” Hamilton was quoted as saying after finishing seventh and nearly half a minute behind Leclerc.

Considering he is at the back-end of his career, it remains to be seen if Hamilton can adapt to the demands of the car and still operate at his best. It would be a great disservice to his career if he walked away from the sport after a disappointing spell at Ferrari.



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Sunrisers fail to shine as a rampant Mumbai makes it four on the trot

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Rohit Sharma’s rollicking half-century powered Mumbai Indians to a comprehensive victory against SRH in Hyderabad on Wednesday.
| Photo Credit: K.V.S. GIRI

A year ago, Sunrisers Hyderabad registered what was then the highest ever total in the IPL
 (277 for three) against Mumbai Indians at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium here. Little over a year later in a rematch at the same venue, the visitor came out on top, chasing the modest 144-run target with seven wickets and 26 balls to spare.

Trent Boult rocked the SRH batting line-up with an early burst.
| Photo Credit:
K.V.S. GIRI

Put in to bat first, Travis Head was dismissed for a four-ball duck. His fellow lefties in the top-order, Abhishek Sharma and Ishan Kishan, fell soon after and Sunrisers ended the PowerPlay with the lowest score (24 for four) by any team this season.

Heinrich Klaasen then went about saving Sunrisers’ blushes, beginning by dispatching Vignesh Puthur into the second tier beyond deep mid-wicket. He painstakingly got the score past the 50-run mark and took the attack to Hardik Pandya, smacking three boundaries and giving the home fans a reason to cheer.

Klaasen stitched a 99-run stand with Abhinav Manohar, bringing up his first half century of the season along the way. By the time the pair fell, SRH had tottered to a moderate total.

MI took an early blow in its chase when Ricketon got a leading edge and Jaydev Unadkat, with momentum taking him in the opposite direction, stuck his left hand and took an excellent catch.

Rohit Sharma, however, ensured the visitor remained in control. His early maximum over deep extra cover off Unadkat underlined his comfort in what was once his home venue in the IPL.

Rohit continued where he left off against Chennai Super Kings, registering his second half century in as many matches, the first time he has done so since 2016. With Net Run Rate (NRR) seemingly on his mind, he switched gears, highlighted by three fours off Harshal Patel in the 14th over.

When he finally fell after chipping a yorker from Eshan Malinga to Abhishek Sharma at midwicket, the win was all but sealed, with Suryakumar Yadav tying it up neatly with a boundary over deep square leg.

MI’s triumph takes it to third on the table while Sunrisers languish at the other end in ninth, just above rock bottom Super Kings by virtue of NRR.



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IPL 2025: Trent Boult’s four-fer cripples Hyderabad; Rohit Sharma leads Mumbai to another victory | Cricket News – The Times of India

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Trent Boult and Rohit Sharma (PTI Photo)

NEW DELHI: Trent Boult ripped the heart out of Sunrisers Hyderabad, and Rohit Sharma applied the fine gloss as Mumbai Indians cantered to a seven‑wicket win with 26 balls to spare at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad on Wednesday night.
The result lifts MI back into the top four and leaves a shell‑shocked SRH clinging to mathematical hopes in IPL 2025.
Given first use of a hard, straw‑coloured surface, Boult unleashed a left‑arm master‑class: late inswing with the new ball, followed by the trademark wobble‑seam away‑goer.
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Travis Head flirted fatally at the first wide one he saw; Abhishek Sharma and Nitish Reddy followed in mirror‑image dismissals, fenced to ring fielders stationed precisely for the miscued poke.
Boult’s opening burst read 2-0-8-2; he returned at the death to york Abhinav Manohar and finish with 4/26, reminding the league that the 35‑year‑old’s power‑play strike rate (one wicket every 12 balls this season) is still elite.
While Boult scythed through the top, Deepak Chahar (2/12) and Hardik Pandya’s short‑ball plan accounted for the middle, reducing SRH to a dire 35/5.
Only Heinrich Klaasen’s defiant 71 (44 balls) prevented a rout, his 99‑run stand with Manohar dragging the visitors to 143/8 — ten short of par on this ground.
Rohit Sharma combined trademark pick‑up pulls with a freshly honed shuffle across off stump that neutered Pat Cummins’s angle.

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He raced to fifty real quick and looked set for a hundred until Zeeshan Ansari’s skidder kissed the inside edge on 70 (46 balls, 8 fours, 3 sixes).
Rohit’s tempo allowed Suryakumar Yadav (40 not out off 19) the freedom to unveil his trademark ramps and whip MI home in the 16th over, finishing the chase at 146/3.


Get the latest IPL 2025 updates on Times of India, including match schedules, team squads, points table and IPL live score for CSK, MI, RCB, KKR, SRH, LSG, DC, GT, PBKS, and RR. Don’t miss the list of players in the race for IPL Orange Cap and IPL Purple cap.





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