IPL 2025 points table, orange cap, purple cap: Vaibhav keeps RR alive in the tonn playoff race of Suryavanshi

Jaipur:
14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi broke several world records as he defeated Rajasthan Royals (RR) by eight wickets in IPL 2025, completing the fastest 200-plus chase in IPL history, defeating Rajasthan Royals (RR) by eight wickets to scored 101 off 38 balls. As a result, RR kept his playoff hopes alive in IPL 2025, witnessed his third win of the season and ended the five-game losing streak. On the other hand, GT suffered its third loss and a big hit for net run-rate, which has now fallen below Mumbai Indians. ‘Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) tops the top.
In the Orange Cap Race, B Sai Reformson has surpassed the lead, while Jose Butler has crossed the 400 -run mark. Suryavanshi now has 151 runs after three matches, with a strike rate of 215. GT Pesar Prasad Krishna has closed the difference in the Purple Cap race, but is still one behind RCB’s Josh Hazelwood (18).
His 35 -ball centenary is now the second fastest in the IPL and is the fastest for any Indian after Chris Gayle’s 30 -ball knock for RCB.
When the other 14-year-old children are busy completing the assignments of a cross country middle school and secretly tampering for a playstation session, the left-handed Suryavanshi, just standing up and distributed against a collective experience of 141 tests against Indian bowlers Ishant Sharma and Mohammad Siraj.
Ishant returned his Test debut in 2006 when Suryavanshi was also not an idea, but “General Alpha” child (all those born between 2010-2024) made fun of everything thrown at him.
His 38 -ball -101 had 11 sixes and seven fours, showing a Regal Yashsvi Jaiswal (70 Not Out, 40 Balls, 9x4s, 2x6s) as the only bizarre.
Even refusal to release the shape of your cheeks with baby fat, there are things that are standing outside holding the stable core and their shape.
The basics manufactured through those hours of the toilet in Patna, played 600 balls a day from the age of 10, showing its results. The days of facing the 16–17-year-old net bowlers for whom his father Sanjeev Suryavanshi will pack 10 additional tiffin boxes, he did not go in vain.
There is no plan by selling the land of the Suryavanshi family to put all its eggs in a basket and to fulfill the ambitions of his son’s cricket, certainly the cricketing spoken in the coming years will become a part of the folklore.
The speed of the bat was amazing and the way he lifted Sirj for a long time and saw Ishant in the square leg stand.
Even Test spinner Washington Sundar scared for the cover and Karim Janat, Afghan International was killed for 30 runs for 30 runs, including a disdainer flick. By the time he was performed by Prasad Krishna, none of the GT players had no energy to celebrate.
Ravi Shastri said in the air that RR’s assistant coach Syrej Khubul had told him about small hobbies for Jalebis and possibly head coach Rahul Dravid did not consider it a little bad.
When Shubman Gill scored a 50-ball-84 and Jose Butler did not take out 26-guides already, it seemed like a destruction, but once Suryavanshi started sending balls into the classroom, no one knew how to stop him.
GT skipper Gill said, “His hitting was tremendous.”
“One of the incredible, best innings that I have seen. I just asked him to keep on walking,” all were Jaiswal, I could say megastar in-on-weighting.
Indian cricket stories are full of how some incredible talents were lost because they could not handle the limelight. In recent times, Laxman Shivaramakrishnan, Maninder Singh, Sadanand Vishwanath, Vinod Kambali and Prithvi Shaw have all failed to realize their ability.
Indian cricket has got a diamond without one and now it is the duty of installation to help it shine and shine it.
The journey of Suryavanshi has just begun.
With PTI input
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