Vaibhav Suryavanshi in India’s T20I team? Sanju Samson to be dropped, Ishan Kishan at…
GH News January 08, 2026 02:06 AM

New Delhi: 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi is no longer discussed as a future talenthe is being considered as a genuine weapon with performances arriving at the pace of a seasoned professional. His what if moment is approaching faster than the cricketing world is used to.
A young teenager opening the batting and dominating attacks has been the topic of discussion recently. This is precisely why the senior T20I discussion has begun so early not because the Indian squad have strong opener contenders but because Suryavanshi is raising the most crucial question in modern T20 planning if you have an explosive option why cant he be included in the squad?
If we look at his stat in the recent U19 Asia Cup Vaibhav Suryavanshi scored 262 runs at a strike rate of 162 which featured a sensational 171 off just 95 balls against the UAE. Continuing his form against South Africa he smashed 127 from only 74 deliveries in Benoni with 96 of those runs coming in boundaries.
In fact Suryavanshi was in a red-hot form in senior domestic cricket becoming the youngest mens List A centurion in the Vijay Hazare Trophy with a 36-ball hundred. Meanwhile his IPL future is already set as Rajasthan Royals picked him up in IPL 2025 for Rs 1.1 crore and he justified the investment with some explosive innings at the top for the franchise.
If the selection committee picks Vaibhav Suryavanshi into the senior T20I setup his role is clear an attacking opener tasked with maximising the powerplay.
Where should Suryavanshi bat if he is included in the squad?
Suryavanshi should open the innings where his impact is most pronounced. Against the new ball he applies instant pressure on opposition captains. Even at the youth level the approach has been consistent.
Could he bat No. 3 to extend the powerplay? Yes if India wants to stick with an established opening pair. However his greatest impact still comes as an opener as it allows him to face more deliveries during the phase where boundary-hitting has the biggest influence on the game.
Sanju Samson making way for Suryavanshi seems the simplest option
Currently the Indian squad has double wicketkeeper-batter options while India can address the keeping duties separately. In that scenario Sanju Samson making way for Suryavanshi seems the simplest route to ease the teenager into the setup.
However Indias T20 World Cup 2026 squad already includes Abhishek along with two wicketkeeper-batters Sanju Samson and Ishan Kishan which puts overall squad balance at the heart of the selection dilemma.
If India wants to bring Suryavanshi into the playing XI without compromising depth one clear option is to leave out Samson and shift Ishan Kishan into the dual role of first-choice wicketkeeper and No. 3 batter.
If Vaibhav Suryavanshi and Abhishek Shrarma opens the innings India can go harder in the Powerplay. As a result players like Rinku Singh and Hardik Pandya can be used as impact accelerators rather than firefighters allowing India to dictate the tempo instead of reacting to it.
Suryavanshis inclusion will reshape how India approach the powerplay
If India picks Suryavanshi while retaining an additional wicketkeeper in the middle order another players spot inevitably comes under pressure. That could push Dube into a more conditions-based role or India may choose to keep him and drop a specialist batter instead banking on Suryavanshis powerplay impact to lessen the dependency on late-overs rescue acts.
Suryavanshis inclusion will reshape how India approach the opening six overs promoting bolder batting plans forcing opposition captains to retreat into defensive field settings early and easing pressure on the rest of the line-up as the run rate tilts in India’s favour.