Vaibhav Sooryavanshi juggernaut meets Mitchell Starc’s swing: Aussie pacer has the blueprint, but his aura under threat

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi has taken apart some of the game’s top pacers, smashing the likes of Jasprit Bumrah, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Arshdeep Singh from the outset. At 15, when most players might get scared of reputations and pressure, he has shown no such hesitation. For him, it is less about who the bowler is and more about reading the ball, judging the length early and backing himself to hit a big shot with his outstanding bat flow.

Mitchell Starc might cause some trouble for Vaibhav Sooryavanshi if he plays on Friday night. (AFP and ANI Image)
Mitchell Starc might cause some trouble for Vaibhav Sooryavanshi if he plays on Friday night. (AFP and ANI Image)

Now he could come up against another great fast bowler of this generation, Mitchell Starc, who has arrived in India after receiving clearance from Cricket Australia. One of Starc’s immediate challenges could be halting the Sooryavanshi juggernaut in the RR vs DC clash, something few have managed in the IPL this season.

Starc has been a proven match-winner in white-ball cricket for more than a decade. He returned to the IPL in 2024 and played a key role in KKR’s title-winning campaign, delivering decisive spells in the playoffs and the final. He followed that up with 14 wickets last season for Delhi Capitals, once again showing his ability to deliver in crucial phases. With his pace, swing and experience, Starc presents a different kind of test. How Sooryavanshi handles that contest could be one of the most intriguing battles of the game.

Sooryavanshi’s returns against left-arm pace this season underline both his attacking instinct and a slight vulnerability when bowlers stay disciplined. He has not hesitated to take them on – scoring 5 runs off 3 balls against Khaleel Ahmed and 7 off 2 against Trent Boult, setting the tone early in his innings. He went even harder at Arshdeep Singh, smashing 20 off 6 balls before falling on the next delivery, while he also managed 7 off 3 against Marco Jansen, continuing his aggressive trend in the same match against Punjab Kings.

But the spell from Mohsin Khan in the LSG clash offered a contrast. By constantly adjusting his lengths, Mohsin built pressure with six dot balls in a row, eventually forcing Sooryavanshi into a big shot that led to his dismissal on a length ball. The pattern is clear, when given pace on the ball or marginal errors in length, Sooryavanshi capitalises quickly. But when bowlers deny him rhythm and keep him guessing, he can be pushed into taking risks with desperation, which might backfire for him.

Also Read – Riyan Parag gets sobering lesson on ‘personal choice’ after vaping row: ‘If action isn’t taken, nobody will learn’

Will Starc follow Mohsin’s blueprint?

Starc will have a fair idea of the blueprint after Mohsin Khan’s spell, and the analysts will have done their homework on how to contain Sooryavanshi. But the Australian quick has rarely needed anything too elaborate; he has built his success on getting the basics right and letting his swing do the damage. Even during a lean IPL phase with KKR a couple of seasons ago, the team backed him in Qualifier 1, and he responded immediately. He removed Travis Head for a duck with a searing delivery that shaped away late and crashed into the stumps, a reminder of what he brings on the big stage. That breakthrough set the tone and dented SRH early. He followed it up in the final as well, outthinking Abhishek Sharma, a batter with a similar attacking template to Sooryavanshi.

Sooryavanshi’s clarity has been one of the defining features of his batting this season. There is a natural flow to his strokeplay, and once he settles, his instinct is to dominate rather than absorb pressure. He has scored 400 runs in nine innings at a strike rate of 238.09, numbers that reflect both his intent and execution. In a format where momentum can swing quickly, he has made it a habit to grab control early, forcing bowlers to react and pushing teams onto the back foot within the powerplay.

Starc has shown time and again that he can stop batters before they get on a roll, and if he turns out on Friday, Sooryavanshi will have to be ready for a different kind of challenge. At the same time, the 15-year-old has already taken on some of the biggest names in the game without hesitation, which means Starc cannot afford even a slight lapse in execution. It sets up a fascinating contest, experience and control against fearless intent, where one good spell or one clean burst of hitting could tilt the balance either way in a matter of overs.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *