Vaibhav Suryavanshi’s Rise ‘has crossed the emergence of Sachin Tendulkar in the 1990s

Vaibhav Suryavanshi has the focus of the world – quite literally. The 14 -year -old threw a 35 -ball ton for Rajasthan Royals against Gujarat’s Titans to become the youngest in the IPL, praising Suryavanshi. From the great Sachin Tendulkar of cricket to the F1 Star Oscar Piastry, everyone is in awe of Vaibhav Suryavanshi. Now, former England captain Nasir Hussain has joined the list of teenager’s long list of fans. He has also said that the address of Suryavanshi has also crossed the emergence of Sachin Tendulkar.
“It was absolutely incredible. Such things happen in India. You go back to see the great Sachin Tendulkar emerging on this scene, but it also moves forward. It is incredible for a 14 -year -old child. It is what everyone was saying … When I was 14 years old, when I was 14 years old, I was trying to score a few runs. I told Skai Sports Cricket.
“This is also the story of Indian cricket. Strength is in his depth. Still another young domestic player to get a hundred. It is also how IPL is growing in some parts of India, which has not historically produced great players. He is from the state of Bihar, which has not produced great international cricketers. It is a great future ahead of itself.
Rajasthan Royals (RR) head coach and former Indian captain Rahul Dravid on Tuesday spoke to 14 -year -old Vaibhav Suryavanshi, saying that his “fearlessness” and the ability to stay unaffected by the occasion or pressure around him make him special.
Only 14 years and 32 days of age Suryavanshi registered his name as the youngest Indian Centurion in T20 cricket and the fastest Indian Centurion in IPL history, which is making a mockery with his batting partner, Yashsavi Jais with 210-Ranes during the struggle against the Titans (GT) of Gujarat on Monday.
Speaking in the Star Sports Press Room for the media, Dravid said about Suryavanshi, “For me, it is really fearless and the way he is not amazed by the pressure from or around the occasion, it is really special. You usually don’t see that someone has so young. He also has a remarkable range of shots.”
Dravid highlighted the fact that the young man would need to work hard and improve his game, as the teams would become smart against him and he would face ups and downs in his career.
He said, “From our side, we are encouraging him to play the way we enjoy-take the game and express yourself. Certainly, he will make mistakes and learn from them, but for now, we just want to have fun and soak in experience,” he said.
Dravid also highlighted how the team retained small Indian talents like Skipar Sanju Samson, Ryan Parag, Dhruv Jurlel and Yashsvi Jaiswal, even if they had to compromise on their foreign line-ups.
“I have seen many talented youth-Rishabh Pant, Shubman Gill, Yashsvi Jaiswal, Prithvi Shaw, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, Shivam Mavi, Khalil Ahmed-and some of them have taken different times to develop different times. The tournament.
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