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Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's IPL Rise Lifts Brand Value

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's Rs 1.1 crore IPL deal, rapid records and Under-19 heroics are turning the 15-year-old batter into a rising cricket brand.

KP
Krisha Patel
· 4 min read
Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's IPL Rise Lifts Brand Value
Photo: Hugo Polo · pexels

At 15, most boys are worrying about board exams. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi is making bowlers worry about their careers.

The young left-hander has turned into Indian cricket’s most talked-about teenager. His latest reminder came in the IPL eliminator, where he smashed 97 from just 29 balls against Sunrisers Hyderabad.

He missed a century, but not the point. Indian cricket may be watching a boy, yet the market already sees a brand.

A teenager with senior numbers

Vaibhav’s rise has been almost absurdly quick. He made his Ranji Trophy debut at 14, then moved into the IPL spotlight when Rajasthan Royals bought him for Rs 1.1 crore.

That auction price changed the way people saw him. Till then, he was a prodigy. After that, he became an investment.

His batting has justified the noise. He has already hit the second-fastest IPL hundred, become the youngest IPL centurion, and recorded the fastest IPL century by an Indian.

Then came the Under-19 World Cup. Vaibhav finished as player of the tournament, and also player of the final after making 175 from 80 balls against England.

That is not a normal teenage score. That is the sort of innings selectors remember for years.

The money behind the stardom

Estimates now place Vaibhav’s net worth above Rs 10 crore in 2026. That figure includes IPL earnings, property, prize money, assets, and sponsorship interest.

For context, Rs 10 crore is serious money even for a senior domestic cricketer. For a 15-year-old, it is extraordinary.

His IPL contract gives him Rs 1.1 crore a year. He also earns match fees, reported at Rs 7.5 lakh per game.

Across 22 IPL matches, that alone adds up to about Rs 1.65 crore. Add the contract value, and cricket income crosses a large mark very quickly.

The bigger money may still be ahead. Brands love youth, clean narratives, and explosive performance. Vaibhav offers all three.

But this is also where Indian cricket must be careful. A young player can become a billboard before he becomes an adult.

Records that build a brand

Vaibhav’s 97 from 29 balls against Sunrisers Hyderabad was brutal and simple. He attacked early, kept swinging cleanly, and nearly touched Chris Gayle territory.

Gayle’s fastest IPL hundred remains a mountain. Vaibhav getting close to that conversation at 15 tells its own story.

The IPL rewards visibility like no other cricket stage. One innings can change a contract, a reputation, and a family’s future.

That is why his numbers matter beyond the scorecard. A 29-ball 97 is not just entertainment. It is commercial proof.

For a sponsor, it says this boy can hold attention. For a franchise, it says he can shift a knockout match.

For Indian cricket fans, it says something simpler. The next generation is not waiting politely outside the door.

Bihar boy, Mumbai life

Vaibhav’s story also has a familiar Indian cricket route. He comes from Tajpur in Samastipur district of Bihar, but his career now runs through bigger cricket centres.

Reports value his ancestral home in Bihar at around Rs 40 lakh to Rs 60 lakh. His Mumbai apartment is estimated between Rs 2.5 crore and Rs 3 crore.

That contrast says a lot about modern Indian cricket. Talent may begin in smaller towns, but professional sport pulls it toward metros.

Families make that journey with hope, pressure, and paperwork. Coaching, travel, housing, fitness, and school all become part of the project.

After the Under-19 World Cup final, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar gave Vaibhav a Rs 50 lakh reward. That was more than a cash prize.

It was also political recognition of a rare sporting success from the state. Bihar has produced talent, but cricket infrastructure has often lagged behind bigger centres.

Vaibhav’s rise will make many parents ask a practical question. If he can do it, why not our child?

Fame arrives before adulthood

The gifts have also started coming. Vaibhav reportedly received a Tata Curvv EV worth around Rs 17 lakh for the highest strike rate in the 2025 IPL.

He also has a Mercedes-Benz gifted by businessman Ranjit Barthakur. These details feed public curiosity, because Indians love the money story around sport.

But there is a more delicate point here. Wealth at 15 brings comfort, but also scrutiny.

Every failure will now carry a price tag. Every selection call will invite debate. Every slump will become a headline.

That is the part fans often miss. A senior player learns to live with praise and insult. A teenager is still building that skin.

The Rajasthan Royals dressing room will matter as much as his bat. Coaches must protect him from becoming only a highlights package.

Selection rooms will also watch his growth closely. India has seen many teenage stars burn bright and fade early.

The best ones survive because somebody manages the pace. They play enough to grow, but not so much that the game eats them.

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’s Rs 10 crore story is not really about luxury flats or cars. It is about how fast Indian cricket can now turn promise into fame, and fame into money. For ordinary fans, the thrill is obvious. A boy from Bihar is hitting world-class bowlers into the stands. The real test begins now, when every run brings expectation, and every expectation asks a 15-year-old to grow up faster than he should.

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