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By:

Waleed Hussain

4 March 2025 at 2:34:30 pm

How Long Will the Selectors Wait Before They Give Vaibhav Sooryavanshi the India Cap?

In the grand theatre of Indian cricket selection, where committees move with the urgency of a sloth on sleeping pills, we have a genuine phenomenon on our hands: Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. Fifteen years old. Yes, fifteen. The boy is still closer in age to a school science project than to a driving license, yet he bats like he’s got a personal grudge against bowlers and gravity itself. But fear not, dear cricket fans. Our wise selectors are on the case. They’re thinking. They’re deliberating....

How Long Will the Selectors Wait Before They Give Vaibhav Sooryavanshi the India Cap?

In the grand theatre of Indian cricket selection, where committees move with the urgency of a sloth on sleeping pills, we have a genuine phenomenon on our hands: Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. Fifteen years old. Yes, fifteen. The boy is still closer in age to a school science project than to a driving license, yet he bats like he’s got a personal grudge against bowlers and gravity itself. But fear not, dear cricket fans. Our wise selectors are on the case. They’re thinking. They’re deliberating. They’re probably waiting for him to complete his tenth standard exams first. Let’s recap the rap sheet of this pint-sized destroyer, because it reads like a satirical fever dream. At 13, he became the youngest player to bag an IPL contract. At 14, the youngest debutant in IPL history. Still 14, the youngest centurion in men’s T20 cricket—101 off 38 balls, a knock so violent it made seasoned pros check if their insurance covered emotional trauma. In IPL 2026, he’s been dropping bombs: 776 runs in 16 matches, a strike rate flirting with 237, one century, five fifties, and a record 72 sixes that made Chris Gayle file a police complaint for identity theft. He guided India to U19 World Cup glory earlier this year with a Player of the Tournament award and a 175 off 80 in the final. The kid treats Jasprit Bumrah like a net bowler and Pat Cummins like a friendly neighborhood spinner. And yet, here we are, in May 2026, still asking the profound philosophical question: When will this child get an India cap? Oh, the selectors must be busy. Perhaps they’re conducting a thorough background check to ensure he’s not actually a time-traveling 28-year-old in disguise. Or maybe they’re waiting for him to fill out a bit more, gain those crucial “senior player muscles” that apparently develop only after repeated domestic grind and several disappointing tours of England in April rain. Because nothing says “ready for international cricket” like surviving three rainy days in Manchester while scoring 12 not out. The humor here is darker than a Delhi power cut. We live in an era where T20 cricket has the shelf life of a tweet, yet we treat prodigies like fine wine that needs decades in the cellar. “Let him play more India A matches,” they’ll say, as if the boy hasn’t already embarrassed international bowlers in the IPL. Imagine the conversation in the selection meeting: “Gentlemen, Sooryavanshi just hit 97 off 29 balls with 12 sixes.” “Impressive. Has he played enough Ranji Trophy though?” “He debuted in Ranji at 12!” “Still… let’s give him time to mature.” Mature? The kid is 15. At this rate, by the time they pick him, he’ll be 18, married, with two kids, and wondering why his prime was spent smashing domestic bowlers while the national team kept losing middle overs. Sarcasm aside (well, not really), this cautious approach is comedy gold in a sport that celebrates audacity. Indian cricket has a proud history of fast-tracking talent when it suits—remember Yuvraj, Kohli, or even the occasional punt on raw pace. But with Sooryavanshi, it feels like the selectors are auditioning for a role in a particularly slow episode of The Office. “Yes, he’s destroying attacks, but what about his ability to play the forward defensive in a Test match that no one will watch?” Never mind that the boy’s technique looks cleaner than most seniors, and his fearlessness is pure. Legends are already banging the drum. Kumar Sangakkara has backed him for a call-up. Virat Kohli gifted him a signed cap (the closest thing to official recognition so far). Sehwag, Gavaskar, even Rabada from the opposition camp—everyone sees it. The boy isn’t just talented; he’s a generational storm. Yet the BCCI selection machinery operates on “process.” Process, in this context, apparently means watching him dominate for another two seasons while muttering about “long-term planning.” Picture the alternate universe where they actually pick him now for the upcoming T20Is. Opposition captains would call for a timeout just to process the horror. Bowlers would develop sudden finger injuries. Commentators would run out of superlatives and start speaking in tongues. “And Sooryavanshi has dispatched that to the orbit… again.” Sponsors would print jerseys in children’s sizes. The meme economy would boom. Instead, we’ll likely get the measured, responsible approach. He’ll tour Sri Lanka with India A, score 800 runs at 250 strike rate, and then someone will say, “Let’s see how he handles pressure in Ireland.” Ireland! Because nothing tests a prodigy like a friendly against associate nations. Look, I get it. Hype can destroy young players. Injuries, form dips, the suffocating weight of expectation in India—it’s a minefield. But when the minefield is being cleared by the player himself with sixes that travel faster than most cars on Mumbai roads, perhaps it’s time to trust the evidence. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi isn’t asking for special treatment. He’s just out there doing what prodigies do: making the impossible routine. At 15, he’s already rewritten records books that veterans spent careers chasing. The selectors waiting game isn’t caution anymore—it’s comedy. Expensive, frustrating comedy. So here’s my humble plea, wrapped in sarcasm: Dear selectors, the boy has done everything except perhaps file his income tax return (which, at his age, is probably handled by his parents anyway). Give him the cap before he needs to shave regularly. Before he starts giving fatherly advice to Rohit Sharma. Before the rest of the world starts wondering if India is run by a selection panel or a group of particularly anxious accountants. Because if you wait much longer, we won’t be celebrating a new Indian star. We’ll be explaining to future generations why we kept the most exciting talent on the bench while he was busy conquering the planet. And that, my friends, would be the real joke. (The write is a senior journalist based in Mumbai.)

Clever seat selection helped BJP to secure historic win

The party won 65 seats against Congress, 37 against NCP (SP) and 29 against Shiv Sena (UBT)

Clever seat selection

Mumbai: The BJP’s strategic seat sharing with the allies has proved beneficial for the party. An analysis of the Assembly election results show that the BJP has scored over its main rival, the Congress, in a big way because of the direct fights.


The analysis shows that BJP defeated all three constituents of the Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi (MVA) – Congress, Shiv Sena (UBT) and NCP (SP) – in the direct fights. This is attributed as one of the reasons for the BJP’s historic poll success.


The BJP contested 147 out of 288 seats. In 76 constituencies, it faced Congress. BJP secured victory in 65 seats and lost only 11 seats, making it a whopping 86 per cent of the total direct fights. This was followed by an even stronger performance against NCP (SP). Of the total 39 fights with Sharad Pawar’s party, BJP captured 37 seats making it 95 per cent of the total fights with NCP (SP). BJP and Shiv Sena (UBT) were head-to-head in 32 constituencies, of which BJP emerged victorious in 29 seats, making this 91 per cent of the total direct contests.


According to a BJP strategist the party had bargained hard with its allies, Shiv Sena and NCP to get the desired constituencies in the seat sharing formula. “We had studied to potential candidates of the MVA. That helped us in choosing the seats where we can register comfortable victories,” the strategist said.


BJP spokesperson Niranjan Shetty attributed the success to all the party workers who worked hard to boost development, infrastructure in the state. He gave credit to Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis for his contribution to the party’s success.


Shetty pointed out that in 2019, Uddhav Thackeray had stalled all the “novel” and “legendary” projects that Fadnavis had started when he had taken over as CM, making it very easy for the people of Maharashtra to strike a comparison between both the leaders and the potential they had for serving the people. “Devendra Fadnavis gave up his post very easily for the larger good. There are many such examples like Venkaiah Naidu who was BJP National President and later worked as the Vice President of India because that was the need of the hour. We seldom care about our posts,” Shetty told The Perfect Voice.


Congress spokesperson Atul Londhe refused to call the election results as the people’s mandate. “This is not at all a Janata mandate. Despite Maharashtra struggling with so many basic social issues, how can BJP acquire such a huge mandate is the question. If a student copies and fails with just passing marks, it can go unnoticed, but if a student copies and bags the number one position, something is fishy. Why is the BJP scared of ballot papers?” he said.

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