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15-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi impressed during an IPL match by outperforming seasoned players, including Jasprit Bumrah. However, experts caution that predicting his future success in cricket is uncertain due to various influencing factors.
When Jasprit Bumrah stood at the top of his mark for the Mumbai Indians against Rajasthan Royals in this yearâs Indian Premier League, he was the most complete all-format bowler in history. With a whiplash action that explodes from a staccato run-up like a stick of dynamite from unraveling silk, he fires searing yorkers and steepling bouncers at will. Three balls later, he was the setup for the storyâs real protagonist.
Before this moment, Bumrah, winner of five IPLs and two World Cups, had delivered 5,445 balls in T20 cricket for Mumbai and his country. Only 180 of them were sent sailing over the rope for six. Thatâs a maximum, to use the parlance of the day, every five overs. Since 2013 he has been a walking cheat code, the point of difference in almost every game. None of that seemed to matter to 15-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi.
Bumrahâs first ball to the kid not old enough to drive was spanked over wide long-on. His third was hoiked over deep-backward square. In half an over, Sooryavanshi had outperformed all the worldâs batters by nearly 1,900%. Once weâd stopped wondering if we could believe our eyes, we started to wonder if we were witnessing the nascent steps of cricketâs next superstar?
âThe short answer is we canât know for sure, and anyone who tells you differently is lying,â says David Court, head of player identification at the England and Wales Cricket Board. âItâs a multitude of factors and the interplay between them. If youâre searching for one golden nugget, youâre selling yourself short.â
Courtâs job is, in essence, to try anyway. He oversees the identification and development of Englandâs best young players, while managing a network of scouts tasked with finding the next Joe Root or Jimmy Anderson. It is an exercise in informed guesswork, complicated by the fact that teenage excellence is both common and misleading.

Jasprit Bumrah was on the receiving end of Vaibhav Sooryavanshiâs pyrotechnics with the bat. Photograph: Sahiba Chawdhary/Reuters
âThere are things we can look for,â Court says. âTalent is one thing, but what weâre really after is mental toughness. That sounds vague and manifests in multiple ways, but essentially it boils down to finding a way through adversity.â
A 2012 paper published by Sports Medicine, titled âThe Rocky Road to the Top: Why Talent Needs Traumaâ, shows that talent benefits from obstacles on the path to success. These arenât necessarily dramatic. In cricket terms this could be a run of poor scores or opposition batters figuring you out as a bowler. What separates those who endure from those who donât is not the absence of these moments, but their response to them over time and under pressure. Court namechecks two of Englandâs rising stars.
âI remember watching Jacob Bethell and James Rew batting against Australia in a youth Test,â Court says, recounting the third innings of the game in Brisbane in 2023. âIt was so hostile. The Aussies really gave it to them. But they were calm. Jacob scored a ton [123] and James got a high score [62]. I remember thinking: âThese guys have got it.ââ
Court is particularly excited to see how Sooryavanshi adjusts when that inevitable lean patch arrives. So too is Paul Adams, the former South Africa wrist-spinner turned coach who got to watch the young Indian starlet up close during the recent Under-19 World Cup, where he scored 439 runs â including 163 against England in the final â with a strike-rate of 169.49.

Jacob Bethell impressed David Court with his calmness against Australia in a youth Test. Photograph: Robbie Stephenson/PA
âHeâs from a different planet,â says Adams, who was a young sensation in his own right, making his Test debut at 18 against England in 1995. âIâm interested if he has a plan other than just smacking it when top bowlers start figuring him out, because they will.â
Adams stood at this crossroads himself. With an action that Mike Gatting likened to a âfrog in a blenderâ, he delivered the ball with flailing limbs as he released the ball while looking towards the sky. In his first three series, âGoggaâ as he was known (Afrikaans for insect), claimed 31 wickets at an average of 25.
âMy strength was that I was unique,â Adams says. âI think itâs important for all youngsters who make the step up to have something unique about them. But you canât rest on that. Once batters started to pick my googly, and they started playing me off the pitch a bit more, I had to develop different plans. Itâs not easy. Iâve seen a lot of top youngsters fall away because they couldnât adapt.â
Much of this has to do with their environment. âWe try to create scenarios that are competitive, relentless, hard-working, but also supportive,â Court adds. The balance is delicate. Too little pressure and a player never develops the tools to cope. Too much, too early, and they risk being overwhelmed.
Adams came through a different, more Spartan era. âIt was sink or swim,â he says. âThere wasnât much care for young players. It was on you to prove that you belonged. I see the love that Vaibhav gets and it looks totally alien to what my generation had.â
Court concurs: âItâs so different. Yes thereâs more appreciation for soft skills, but there are other variables at play. Lads get a few runs at a World Cup and suddenly theyâve got thousands more followers. They hit one boundary in a game and thatâs instantly posted on their socials. Theyâre dealing with that while theyâre still playing.â
Sooryavanshi has 3.8 million followers on Instagram. His fame has outpaced the glut of runs that cannon off his bat. His challenge from here will be far more complex than simply spanking the worldâs best bowler.
Vaibhav Sooryavanshi is a 15-year-old cricketer who gained attention for his remarkable performance against Jasprit Bumrah in the IPL, showcasing extraordinary batting skills.
Sooryavanshi hit two sixes off Jasprit Bumrah's bowling, outperforming established players by a significant margin.
Young cricketers face challenges such as the unpredictability of talent development, competition, and the pressure of maintaining performance over time.
David Court is the head of player identification at the England and Wales Cricket Board, overseeing the scouting and development of promising young players like Sooryavanshi.

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