Vaibhav Suryavanshi’s record-breaking outing: AB de Villiers’ feat bettered, only 19 balls separated him and fastest 200
In an explosive innings, Vaibhav Suryavanshi scored 190 runs, including 15 sixes, breaking multiple records and showcasing elite youth talent.
Vaibhav Suryavanshi did not just score 190 runs against Arunachal Pradesh; he basically turned a Vijay Hazare innings into a record-breaker’s speedrun.
On a morning when most eyes were still drifting towards the bigger names returning to domestic cricket, the 14-year-old Bihar batter hijacked the day with an 84-ball assault that came out as a statement: the future doesn’t wait for permission.
The records from Suryavanshi’s 190 (84)
1. Youngest List A centurion
Vaibhav Suryavanshi reached the three-figure mark at 14 years, 272 days, surpassing the youngest century record held by Zahoor Elahi (15 years, 209 days).
2. Second fastest List A century by an Indian
His 100 came off just 36 balls, the second fastest List A century by an Indian. It is now behind only Anmolpreet Singh’s 35-ball hundred for Punjab in 2024.
3. Fastest 150 in List A cricket
Suryavanshi hit 150 in 54 balls, breaking the previous record held by AB de Villiers, who had reached 150 in 64 balls against the West Indies in 2015.
Also Read: Vaibhav Suryavanshi goes berserk in Vijay Hazare Trophy, misses fastest double century after world record 36-ball 100
4. Vijay Hazare Trophy for most sixes in an innings
During his stay in the middle against Arunachal Pradesh, Vaibhav hit 15 sixes. That made him draw levels with Narayan Jagadeesan’s 17, during his historic 277* in the 2022-23 season.
The numbers alone tell you this wasn’t a cameo dressed up as a highlight reel. It was sustained hitting across phases, with enough boundary volume. The fact that he was on his way to the fastest-ever double hundred by a batter in List A cricket (Chad Bowes -103 balls) is also an indication of how ruthless and relentless his aggression was.
For Suryavanshi, the 190 is also a loud reminder of what elite youth talent looks like when it meets freedom. And for everyone else in the tournament, it is an early warning that this season’s most disruptive headline might not come from a marquee name; it might come from a teenager who’s already batting like he has a cheat code.