Suryavanshi Breaks IPL Records: Youngest to 600, 12 Sixes
Digital Desk
Vaibhav Suryavanshi, 15, becomes youngest to 600 IPL runs with explosive 97 off 29 balls featuring 12 sixes. Rajasthan defeats Hyderabad in playoff eliminator.
Youngest to 600 IPL runs, 12-sixer blitz in playoff demolition
Rajasthan Royals put on a breathtaking show at the Maharaja Yadvindra Singh Stadium in Mullanpur, storming past Sunrisers Hyderabad by 47 runs in a decisive eliminator clash. The victory sets up a Qualifier-2 encounter against Gujarat Titans on May 29, with the winner advancing to the final.
But the night belonged to Vaibhav Suryavanshi, the teenage sensation who rewrote IPL history with a blistering 97 off 29 balls—a performance that left the stadium stunned when he fell just three runs short of a century.
A record-breaking arrival
At just 15 years old, Suryavanshi became the youngest batter to score 600 runs in a single IPL season, surpassing Rishabh Pant's earlier mark set in 2018. The milestone came during his match-winning innings, underscoring a season of extraordinary dominance from a player who still has most of his career ahead of him.
"It's the kind of performance that changes the narrative," said one analyst in the press box, watching a teenager dismantle a playoff-standard attack with clinical precision.
The assault on records
Suryavanshi's aggressive intent was clear from the opening over. Against Pat Cummins in the third over, he struck consecutive sixes over long-on, third man, and over the bowler—three balls, three maximums. By the fourth over, facing Sakib Huson, he had already completed his fifty off just 16 deliveries, equalling Suresh Raina's long-standing IPL playoff record for fastest fifty.
The innings didn't slow. Suryavanshi finished with 12 sixes—a new IPL playoff record, breaking Shubman Gill's previous best of 10. In doing so, he also dethroned Chris Gayle's season-long record of 59 sixes in 2012, now sitting at 65 for the current campaign.
His strike rate of 334.48 placed him in elite company. Across IPL history, he became only the third batter to score 50-plus runs at a strike rate exceeding 300, joining Nicholas Pooran and Jake Fraser-McGurk.
The powerplay dominance
The first six overs told much of the story. Suryavanshi scored 71 runs off 23 deliveries in the powerplay, setting a new single-season IPL record for powerplay runs. His eight sixes during this phase also marked a career-high for any batter in the opening overs of an IPL match.
It's a record that underscores not just his aggression, but a shift in how T20 cricket is being played. When a 15-year-old can accumulate 490 powerplay runs across a season—surpassing David Warner's 467 from 2016—it signals generational change.
Team triumph in the backdrop
Rajasthan's collective effort was equally significant. The franchise posted 243 for 8, the second-highest team total in IPL playoff history. Their 17 sixes matched Mumbai Indians' previous record from earlier this season, while their 37 boundaries ranked second all-time in playoff cricket.
The team's dominance against Hyderabad extended a pattern: they've now scored 200-plus against the Sunrisers eight times, equalling the record for most such scores against a single opponent in league history.
When the moment passed
The stadium fell silent when Suryavanshi holed out to third man off Prafful Hinge's bowling. He'd just cracked a six and a four in the same over—the narrative of explosive batting interrupted by a moment of misfortune. At 97, he was three away from a maiden IPL century, a fact that hung in the air as he departed.
"There's no disappointment in that innings," one commentator noted. "He came, he conquered, and he left having changed how we see the format."
What lies ahead
Sunrisers' exit marks the end of a campaign that saw several individual brilliance but fell short in the knockout stage. For Rajasthan, the path to the final remains clear: victory against Gujarat on May 29 in Qualifier-2 opens the door to face Bangalore in the summit clash on May 31.
But beyond the tournament trajectory, Suryavanshi's night in Mullanpur will be remembered as the moment a teenage athlete announced himself as a generational talent. Records were meant to be broken, and he did so with the kind of ease that suggests many more milestones lie ahead.
--------
🚨 Beat the News Rush – Join Now!
Get breaking alerts, hot exclusives, and game-changing stories instantly on your phone. No delays, no fluff – just the edge you need. ⚡
Tap to join:
🟢 WhatsApp Channel: Dainik Jagran MP CG
Crave more?
🅕 Facebook: Dainik Jagran MP CG English
🅧 Twitter (X): Dainik Jagran MP CG
🅘 Instagram: Dainik Jagran MP CG
Share the fire – keep your crew ahead! 🗞️🔥
Suryavanshi Breaks IPL Records: Youngest to 600, 12 Sixes
Digital Desk
Youngest to 600 IPL runs, 12-sixer blitz in playoff demolition
Rajasthan Royals put on a breathtaking show at the Maharaja Yadvindra Singh Stadium in Mullanpur, storming past Sunrisers Hyderabad by 47 runs in a decisive eliminator clash. The victory sets up a Qualifier-2 encounter against Gujarat Titans on May 29, with the winner advancing to the final.
But the night belonged to Vaibhav Suryavanshi, the teenage sensation who rewrote IPL history with a blistering 97 off 29 balls—a performance that left the stadium stunned when he fell just three runs short of a century.
A record-breaking arrival
At just 15 years old, Suryavanshi became the youngest batter to score 600 runs in a single IPL season, surpassing Rishabh Pant's earlier mark set in 2018. The milestone came during his match-winning innings, underscoring a season of extraordinary dominance from a player who still has most of his career ahead of him.
"It's the kind of performance that changes the narrative," said one analyst in the press box, watching a teenager dismantle a playoff-standard attack with clinical precision.
The assault on records
Suryavanshi's aggressive intent was clear from the opening over. Against Pat Cummins in the third over, he struck consecutive sixes over long-on, third man, and over the bowler—three balls, three maximums. By the fourth over, facing Sakib Huson, he had already completed his fifty off just 16 deliveries, equalling Suresh Raina's long-standing IPL playoff record for fastest fifty.
The innings didn't slow. Suryavanshi finished with 12 sixes—a new IPL playoff record, breaking Shubman Gill's previous best of 10. In doing so, he also dethroned Chris Gayle's season-long record of 59 sixes in 2012, now sitting at 65 for the current campaign.
His strike rate of 334.48 placed him in elite company. Across IPL history, he became only the third batter to score 50-plus runs at a strike rate exceeding 300, joining Nicholas Pooran and Jake Fraser-McGurk.
The powerplay dominance
The first six overs told much of the story. Suryavanshi scored 71 runs off 23 deliveries in the powerplay, setting a new single-season IPL record for powerplay runs. His eight sixes during this phase also marked a career-high for any batter in the opening overs of an IPL match.
It's a record that underscores not just his aggression, but a shift in how T20 cricket is being played. When a 15-year-old can accumulate 490 powerplay runs across a season—surpassing David Warner's 467 from 2016—it signals generational change.
Team triumph in the backdrop
Rajasthan's collective effort was equally significant. The franchise posted 243 for 8, the second-highest team total in IPL playoff history. Their 17 sixes matched Mumbai Indians' previous record from earlier this season, while their 37 boundaries ranked second all-time in playoff cricket.
The team's dominance against Hyderabad extended a pattern: they've now scored 200-plus against the Sunrisers eight times, equalling the record for most such scores against a single opponent in league history.
When the moment passed
The stadium fell silent when Suryavanshi holed out to third man off Prafful Hinge's bowling. He'd just cracked a six and a four in the same over—the narrative of explosive batting interrupted by a moment of misfortune. At 97, he was three away from a maiden IPL century, a fact that hung in the air as he departed.
"There's no disappointment in that innings," one commentator noted. "He came, he conquered, and he left having changed how we see the format."
What lies ahead
Sunrisers' exit marks the end of a campaign that saw several individual brilliance but fell short in the knockout stage. For Rajasthan, the path to the final remains clear: victory against Gujarat on May 29 in Qualifier-2 opens the door to face Bangalore in the summit clash on May 31.
But beyond the tournament trajectory, Suryavanshi's night in Mullanpur will be remembered as the moment a teenage athlete announced himself as a generational talent. Records were meant to be broken, and he did so with the kind of ease that suggests many more milestones lie ahead.