New Delhi, April 20: It takes a village to raise a champion is an old saying and 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi fits that adage perfectly.
The rise of Vaibhav is an incredible story where a range of people joined hands to ensure that a boy, barely in his teens, could play his first high-stakes match in professional cricket without a trace of fear.
He made the world sit up and take note of his talent by smacking Shardul Thakur for a six in the very first delivery he faced in IPL on Saturday.Such a talent did not emerge overnight.
The foundation of this incredible story was laid when his father Sanjiv Suryavanshi sold his farmland to fuel his son’s cricket dreams.
Taking it forward was Patna-based cricket coach Manish Ojha, who recognised the special talent and ensured that Vaibhav, all of 10 at that time, gets to face at least 600 deliveries a day to be ready for the big challenge when the opportunity knocks on the door.
Then Bihar Cricket Association backed its boy and fast-tracked him into Ranji Trophy just as when he hit the teens.
The U-19 national selectors, under chairmanship of Thilak Naidu. pushed him into ‘colts Test cricket’.
And finally the likes of Rahul Dravid and Zubin Bharucha at Rajasthan Royals did their bit in polishing the uncut diamond by making him face side-arm throwdowns at 150-plus clicks leading up to the start of IPL.
When the average 14-year-olds are busy playing PS5, and managing ‘homework’, the teenager from Bihar’s Samastipur muscled one from multi-Test veteran like Shardul Thakur into Sawai Man Singh Stadium stands, leaving thousands astonished.A 34-run ball off 20 balls in IPL universe is a routine stuff but if the owner of the innings is just into his teens, fans would want to know more about Rajasthan Royals’ Rs 1.10 crore recruit.
“His father Sanjiv brought him to me when he was eight years old. Every child is different but from that age, if I look at other boys of his age, he had the sense to execute whatever he was taught.
His stance, back-lift, execution, intent, the four pillars were always in sync,” Ojha told PTI talking about his ward.But how a 14-year-old, who is still in his formative years, generates such power in his strokes that he sent the ball sparing into the stands not once but thrice while facing a top notch attack? “You people saw power in his shot, I saw the body position, bat swing and perfect timing.
If power would be only criteria to hit sixes, then wrestlers would have played cricket. This is five years of training, playing 600 hundred balls every day. (PTI)