
Vaibhav Suryavanshi: Cricket's 14-year-old prodigy must beware the cautionary tales of sport's starlets
Whatever happened to Freddy Adu? It is a question many will have asked in the 20 years since he made his senior debut. You may recall the tale of the Ghana-born, USA-raised teenage football phenom, drafted into Major League Soccer (MLS) as a 14-year-old accompanied by the loftiest of comparisons with Pele. This, the headlines cried, was the wunderkind to drive America's footballing expansion; the face of the future and the boy to carry the burden of a nation's dreams on his shoulders.
Or not, it proved. Adu concluded a perfectly creditable playing career with Swedish club Osterlen in 2021, collecting 17 international caps and an impressive array of stamps in his passport along the way. Stints in Portugal, Monaco, Greece, Turkey, Brazil, Serbia and Finland form remarkable chapters in an incredible sporting story – even if Adu never lived up to the unfair potential others promised of him.
It is a cautionary fairytale that unfortunately came to mind when watching Vaibhav Suryavanshi make a most remarkable 35-ball century for Rajasthan Royals on Monday. If the public had enjoyed passing familiarity with the name of the teenager from the Bihar province in India's far north-east after he became the youngest player ever bought at the Indian Premier League (IPL) auction in December, his slamming of the first ball he faced in the competition for six thrust him further into the cricketing consciousness.
His ton, however, was something else entirely. This was not an effort to be lauded simply due to the 14-year-old's tender age but one of the great IPL innings, the fastest century ever made by an Indian in a competition that has transformed the sport. Suryavanshi bettered the mark of Yusuf Pathan made by the former all-rounder in a 2010 innings that the youngster was not even alive to see. This was no understrength bowling attack being flayed for seven fours and 11 sixes in an hour of extraordinary hitting, either, but one formed of seven fully-fledged internationals and including, in Rashid Khan, perhaps the finest T20 spinner of all-time.
Strutting down in celebration with arms spread after depositing Khan over deep midwicket for six to reach the milestone, Suryavanshi had the steely-eyed look of a cricketer who knows he has the world at his feet. His coaches at the Royals speak of a mature character who has embraced every challenge thrust in front of him, including taking on Jofra Archer in the nets while others dodge and dive away from the England quick. A past prodigy was impressed. 'Vaibhav's fearless approach, bat speed, picking the length early, and transferring the energy behind the ball was the recipe behind a fabulous innings,' Sachin Tendulkar posted on X, formerly Twitter. 'End result: 101 runs off 38 balls. Well played!'
One hopes that Suryavanshi has the right figures around him and enjoys the sort of sporting life his talent would suggest lies ahead. But the tale of Adu is just one reason to fear for Suryavanshi's future. Many a sporting starlet has burned brightly only to soon reach supernova, often leaving a difficult legacy behind. The singular drive required to sustain a career at the top takes its toll on all those who embark on the difficult journey. Tennis player Todd Ley, signed by IMG at 12, detailed in an interview with Fox Sports earlier this year how he had built his identity around his chosen pursuit and struggled to deal with the consequences as it crumbled.
'It was a mess,' Ley explained, having battled substance abuse problems. 'And I was enjoying it. It felt like I was completely annihilating this image other people had created for me. The feeling of destroying myself was cathartic.
'Because I'd been robbed of a childhood, I felt like I had absolutely every right to make up for what I missed out on. So, I behaved like a child does. And it was fantastic, but also very problematic.'
The lifestyle demands placed on emergent athletes are extreme. If one of the great growing phases of adolescence is developing the capacity to learn from one's mistakes, there are times where those in the sporting spotlight are not afforded the chance to do so, each error on – or perhaps more damagingly off – the pitch scrutinised or censured. Even a figure like Adu – who produced a career to be proud of – is ultimately defined by the player he never became than the player he was.
In Indian cricket, such thoughts can never be far away. A unique culture of sporting deification can have tremendous positives but also bedevil the gods at its centre. Virat Kohli is thought to have moved his family to London, protecting their privacy and allowing him to walk the streets without undue attention. While Tendulkar went on to become a great of the game, his no-less talented contemporary Vinod Kambli played his last Test at the age of 23 while averaging more than 50, tumbling away among tales of off-field tumult even in an age before social media.
Not all stories are quite so dramatic. Though his exact age remains a matter of some dispute, Pakistan's Hasan Raza is widely recognised as the youngest male Test cricketer but made just 22 more international appearances having been unable to replicate his early success; eight years on since becoming Derbyshire's youngest first-class player, the gifted off-spinner Hamidullah Qadri finds himself cast out by county cricket after leaving Kent. Even for the prodigious and promising, professional sport can be uncompromising and unforgiving.
Not that any of this should concern Suryavanshi. One of the great joys of youth is to live and savour each moment, the sort of spirit shown in abundance in his breakthrough knock. May the boy from Bihar lap up the riches and rewards on offer and continue to love his cricket – and let us hope that cricket loves him back.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
28 minutes ago
- Reuters
Pacers admit Tyrese Haliburton is hurting but will play Game 3
June 10 - INDIANAPOLIS -- Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle admits his point guard is not fully healthy, but he's 100 percent certain Tyrese Haliburton is playing in Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday night. The best-of-seven series is tied 1-1. "I don't think you're going to hear him making a big deal out of it," Carlisle said Tuesday at Gainbridge Fieldhouse of Haliburton's status as the Finals stage was being set in Indiana for the first time since 2000. "This is the time of year where it just doesn't get any better than this. The atmosphere, the interest, the opportunity, coming back and being at home. I mean, there's just so much to be excited about. We've got a couple guys that are slightly under the weather; I don't think anything is going to keep these guys from playing in the game." Haliburton delivered the dagger jumpshot to sink the Oklahoma City Thunder on their home court in Game 1 and win 111-110. Carlisle said Haliburton was "feeling it" during Game 2, when he was dogged by a physical defensive rotation, turned the ball over five times -- more than any game in the previous series against the Cleveland Cavaliers and New York Knicks -- and is 5-of-15 from 3-point range in the first two games of the Finals. Haliburton described his injury as a "lower leg thing" and referred to it as a non-factor. "I'll leave it at that. I don't think there's anything more to elaborate. I feel fine and I'll be ready to go for Game 3," Haliburton, 25, said. In 73 regular-season games, Haliburton averaged 18.6 points, 3.5 rebounds and 9.2 assists. Game 4 is scheduled for Friday night in Indianapolis. --Jeff Reynolds, Field Level Media


Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Rory McIlroy is undergoing a post-Masters hangover and the US Open comes at an unfortunate time for him - no course is more vindictive towards absent minds, writes RIATH AL-SAMARRAI
Drivers and drive. Rory McIlroy 's recent struggles in each department have stripped away any sense of bullishness from his outer layer as he embarks on the US Open this week. That he must nurture such difficulties at Oakmont of all places is a case of unfortunate timing. No course is more vindictive towards absent minds and loose tee shots and there is no escaping the reality that the world No 2 is enduring a post-Masters hangover. To sum up why this is a less-than-ideal setting for McIlroy's current situation, consider what he told us on Tuesday about a reconnaissance trip here eight days earlier. 'I birdied the last two holes for 81,' he said. The upside is that the weather in Pittsburgh this week is far more benign than last. The downside is that after his Monday round he then travelled to the Canadian Open and missed the cut by a mile. Having tied for 47th at the PGA Championship in his previous outing, there are grounds to ask what is eating away at a golfer who started the season like a runaway train and whose mood since that Augusta catharsis has been as variable as his driving. The efforts to correct the latter have been complicated. He revealed here that he will play the season's third major with his fourth different driver configuration in the space of a month, after binning the one with which he hit less than half of the fairways in Canada. Given the severe penalties for entering the rough at Oakmont, McIlroy will be hoping for a significant uplift and he has at least offered positive feedback. 'I did a good bit of practice at home and feel like I'm in a better place with everything going into this week,' he said. Asked what he learned, he added: 'That I wasn't using the right driver.' Enquiries to establish which model of TaylorMade weapon he has chosen rebounded off a chippy wall: 'Come out and watch me hit balls, and you'll see.' It should be pointed out that, usually, McIlroy has a strong, respectful relationship with reporters. But such dynamics have been tested a little recently, as shown by his media blackout after it emerged he was forced to change a non-compliant driver prior to the PGA Championship. His unhappiness in the aftermath was directed towards journalists doing their jobs but the more relevant frustration, clearly, was that he had to switch the most effective club in his bag. Scottie Scheffler endured an identical disruption and yet he prevailed to win the tournament, as McIlroy himself pointed out on Tuesday. 'It wasn't a big deal for Scottie, so it shouldn't have been a big deal for me,' he said. It's an interesting time for McIlroy. He has spoken previously about the emotional come-down that accompanied his Masters high and he went further on the theme here, saying: 'Look, you dream about the final putt going in at the Masters, but you don't think about what comes next. 'I think I've always been a player that struggles to play after a big event, after I win whatever tournament. I always struggle to show up with motivation the next. 'I think chasing a certain goal for the better part of a decade and a half, I think I'm allowed a little bit of time to relax a little bit.' No one of sound mind would dispute the latter. 'I think it's trying to have a little bit of amnesia and forget about what happened six weeks ago,' added McIlroy. 'Then it's just trying to find the motivation to go back out there and work as hard as I've been working. 'At some point, you have to realise that there's a little bit more golf left to play this season.' While there have been none of the usual declarations of confidence, it should not be overlooked that McIlroy has not finish outside the top nine in the past six editions of this most idiosyncratic of tournaments, including his heartbreak against Bryson DeChambeau in 2024. US Opens are not for everyone, but McIlroy, the 2011 champion, is far more suited to the test than most. The most challenging of surroundings could also offer the jolt he currently needs.


Reuters
38 minutes ago
- Reuters
DeChambeau not seeking LIV Golf exit: 'they see the value in me'
OAKMONT, Pennsylvania, June 10 (Reuters) - Bryson DeChambeau, who has evolved into one of the game's most popular players, revealed on Tuesday that his contract with LIV Golf expires next year and that he has no plans to take his big-hitting talents elsewhere. DeChambeau joined LIV in 2022 and his future with the Saudi-backed circuit has been the source of speculation, with some suggesting the two-times major champion turned down a proposal for a new contract and is looking to return to the PGA Tour. But DeChambeau, speaking to reporters at Oakmont Country Club ahead of his U.S. Open title defence this week, said he feels the team element of LIV Golf is a viable option and one he wants to be a part of. "We're looking to negotiate end of this year, and I'm very excited," said DeChambeau, who is captain of LIV Golf's Crushers GC. "They see the value in me. I see the value in what they can provide, and I believe we'll come to some sort of resolution on that. Super excited for the future." LIV Golf, which features no-cut, 54-hole events, held its inaugural event in June 2022, and through mega-money contracts and lucrative purses has lured some of golf's biggest names. The PGA Tour and Saudi backers of rival LIV Golf have yet to reach an official deal that would unite the game of golf despite agreeing to a "framework agreement" two years ago to merge and form one unified commercial entity. "I think that LIV is not going anywhere," said DeChambeau, who headlines the list of 14 LIV Golf players in the U.S. Open field this week. "(Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan) has been steadfast in his belief on team golf, and whether everybody believes in it or not, I think it's a viable option. I think it's a viable commercial option." DeChambeau said he feels there is a "sustainable model" for team golf. "Our team has been EBITDA positive for the past two years, so we're starting to grow and move in the right direction, just like TGL," said DeChambeau. "TGL has done a great job. They've got some teams that are making some money, and I believe there is a sustainable model out there." TGL is a tech-infused indoor golf league created by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy that held its first season earlier this year and featured players hitting shots at a simulator screen before moving to a green that can rotate 360 degrees, creating hole-to-hole variations. "How it all works with the game of golf, who knows, but I know my worth. I know what LIV brings to the table," DeChambeau added. "And I'm excited for the future of what golf is going to be."