Whiz kid, 15, dominates IPL awards, but he’s too young to drive the prize
A day after Australia’s ODI team was thrashed in Rawalpindi, Josh Hazlewood and Tim David helped Virat Kohli and Royal Challengers Bangalore lift the IPL trophy for the second time in as many seasons.
Watching on as Australia’s Josh Hazlewood and Tim David helped Virat Kohli and Royal Challengers Bangalore lift the IPL trophy overnight was 15-year-old whiz kid Vaibhav Suryavanshi, who collected an armful of awards for his record-breaking tournament.
Suryavanshi, who hammered 72 sixes for the tournament, is the first player to win the emerging player award, the tournament MVP and the orange cap for leading runmaker all in the same season, after crashing his way to 776 runs at a strike rate of better than 237. He watched part of the final with cricket supremo Jay Shah, who is officially now the ICC chair but is still clearly the most powerful person as far as the BCCI is concerned.
The prize for being the tournament’s “super striker” (the player with the highest strike rate) was a car – Tata Sierra SUV – which Suryavanshi is too young to drive by three years.
It was an astonishing achievement considering the IPL attracts the best T20 players in the world.
“It feels nice, but there is pressure because I am doing interviews. It is a proud moment and I will try and do well next season too,” Suryanvashi said at the presentation. “I try to back my game and if the ball is there to be hit, I go all out for it and just try to play that way.
“How to play the pressure game, how to change myself every game, you can’t play every game in one mode, you need to read the game situation and play according to the team’s requirements. These are my learnings from this season.”
A day after Australia’s ODI team was thrashed in Rawalpindi, RCB won the title for the second time in as many seasons before a heaving crowd at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad.
For Hazlewood, the tournament was timely proof that he can stay on the park for a whole series, although there will be conversations aplenty about whether he and other Australian Test players should take part in next year's IPL, spliced as it is between major Test series against India and England.
"I think the franchise has been put together beautifully," Hazlewood said. "Not just the players, but I think the support staff, again, it's a nice relaxed atmosphere to try to play your best cricket and perform.
"It's hard to build that culture so quickly when the team changes quite a bit every three years, but it feels like we've got that now. Obviously winning helps, but it just feels like the team's quite a tight unit and we're playing for someone else other than ourselves sort of all the time. Three-peat, yeah, I can't see why not."
In an IPL that had been dominated by fast scoring, personified by Suryavanshi, the b
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