
Super Over Chaos: Teen Prodigy Vaibhav Sooryavanshi at Centre of India A’s Dambulla Drama
A controversial Super Over defeat for India A against Sri Lanka A in Dambulla sparked a heated on-field altercation involving 15-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, overshadowing a match already marred by penalty runs and fading light disputes.
A routine group-stage fixture in the Tri-Nation A Series descended into acrimony in Dambulla on Monday, as India A’s Super Over loss to Sri Lanka A triggered a physical confrontation involving 15-year-old batting prodigy Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. After pacer Kugathas Mathulan delivered a pinpoint yorker that Sooryavanshi could not connect with, leaving India two runs short of their 17-run target, the teenager exchanged words with celebrating Sri Lankan fielders. Footage circulating across Indian and Gulf-based media showed the altercation escalating into a brief shoving match before teammate Suryansh Shedge and senior Sri Lanka wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella intervened to separate the players. The incident immediately overshadowed a contest already freighted with tension.
The match had earlier been shaped by a 10-run penalty imposed on India A for repeated breaches of the protected area by Vipraj Nigam and Anukul Roy, a sanction that proved decisive in a game where Sri Lanka A matched India’s adjusted total of 266 with a scrambled leg-bye and run-out off the final delivery of regulation play. India captain Tilak Varma was seen remonstrating with umpires over the run-out decision, arguing that the ball was dead, before the Super Over was confirmed. Sri Lanka posted 16 runs in the extra period, and Mathulan’s defence of that slender target—conceding just eight runs—sealed a victory that left India A needing to beat Afghanistan A to keep their final hopes alive.
Sooryavanshi’s involvement in the post-match fracas drew particular scrutiny given his meteoric rise. Fresh from an Orange Cap-winning IPL 2026 campaign and a maiden senior India call-up, the left-hander has found the transition to 50-over cricket testing, managing only 21 off 14 balls in this match and failing to pass fifty in the series. Indian media reports noted that the youngster first attempted to pull captain Varma away from the umpiring dispute, only to later become embroiled in his own heated exchange. Observers in Colombo and New Delhi alike questioned whether the pressures of elite A-team competition were exposing a maturity gap for a player still navigating his mid-teens.
Beyond the immediate drama, the match highlighted the fine margins of List A cricket. The 10-run penalty, a rarity at this level, underscored India A’s indiscipline in the field, while the fading light and disputed run-out added layers of confusion before the Super Over. The squad has since been reinforced by the call-up of Gujarat Titans fast bowler Ashok Sharma, a 23-year-old capable of touching 150 kph, as an injury replacement for Yudhvir Singh. With the senior Indian team sitting atop the ICC ODI rankings, the A side’s stumbles serve as a reminder that the pathway from promise to performance is seldom linear.
For Sooryavanshi, the Dambulla evening may prove a formative, if bruising, lesson. The talent that set the IPL alight is not in question, but the demands of the longer white-ball format—and the emotional control required at the highest levels—are now his to master. As India A prepare for a must-win encounter against Afghanistan A, the focus will shift from controversy to the collective task of salvaging a tournament campaign that, much like their teenage opener, is searching for a second gear.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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A thrilling youth cricket match in Dambulla ended in controversy and a Super Over defeat for India A. A 10-run penalty for pitch infringement and a heated exchange involving 15-year-old prodigy Vaibhav Sooryavanshi overshadowed the contest. The Indian camp expressed frustration over the umpiring decisions as emotions ran high.
A heated on-field altercation marred the India A-Sri Lanka A youth cricket match in Dambulla, with tempers boiling over after a Super Over defeat. Teenage batter Vaibhav Sooryavanshi was seen in a verbal spat that turned physical, requiring intervention from teammates and officials. The incident raised concerns over player conduct in high-pressure junior fixtures.
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