Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’s sixes set social media on fire: “….went to school and learnt only 4 and 6 tables in maths class”— best fan reactions from IPL 2026
The internet basically melted on Saturday night. There’s no other way to describe what happened on Twitter, Instagram, and every cricket forum you can think of when a 15-year-old decided to hit four consecutive sixes and remind everyone why they care about cricket in the first place. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi didn’t just bat, he took the entire conversation hostage for hours.From the moment he walked to the crease against Sunrisers Hyderabad, people were watching. But then he hit his first ball against Praful Hinge for a six. Then another. Then another. And then one more. Four sixes in a row off the final four deliveries of an opening over. Social media went from casual commentary to pure chaos in about ninety seconds. People were posting and reposting, trying to capture what they’d just witnessed because words honestly weren’t cutting it.One user summed it up perfectly: “Vaibhav Suryavanshi hit 4 consecutive sixes against Praful Hinge in the first over itself 😭💀”. The crying emoji wasn’t about being sad. It was the only way to express the surreal feeling of watching a teenager do something that professional cricketers spend decades trying to learn. The double skull emoji basically meant “this is impossible and I’m dead.” The internet speaks its own language now, and that language is pure shock.The best reactions were the ones that showed up when he reached his century. People weren’t even trying to be cool about it anymore. “VAIBHAV SURYAVANSHI hundred in just 36 balls… HE IS HERE TO RULE #RRvSRH” read one post, and you could practically feel the intensity through the screen. Another person just said what everyone was thinking: “Vaibhav Suryavanshi is SCARY good, Genius. Legendary stuff 🇮🇳”. That’s the reaction you get when you’ve transcended being a young talent and just become something else entirely. Scary good. Not promising. Not talented. Scary good.The comedy started rolling too, which is always a sign that something genuinely massive has happened. Someone posted: “Vaibhav Sooryavanshi went to school and learnt only 4 and 6 tables in maths class”. It’s a joke about how he only hits fours and sixes, but honestly, it works because it’s kind of true. Another user took it further with the math angle: “Is Vaibhav Sooryavanshi even human? His 100 has come in 36 balls, which funnily is a ball slower than the 100 he got last year! For a moment I thought he will go for a 200 but…”. The fact that getting a century in 36 balls was actually slower than his previous one. Let that sink in. That’s not the normal conversation you have about cricket.People started comparing him to history. Someone wrote about him breaking Yuvraj Singh’s 12-ball fifty record eventually. Another mentioned how if he entered the auction right now, he’d fetch more than Rs 28 crores. The valuations started happening on social media instantly—”If Vaibhav Suryavanshi enters the auction today, he would easily fetch more than Rs 28 crores. He’s not just a player, he’s appointment viewing. A franchise face in the making.” That last sentence did the real work. He’s not a player. He’s appointment viewing. That’s what you become when you’re so good that people plan their evenings around watching you bat.The emotional side of it came through too. Fans weren’t just celebrating numbers. One post that got a ton of engagement was a photo of the entire Rajasthan Royals dugout standing up and applauding while he batted. That’s the kind of moment that transcends cricket—your own team, your own coaches, just going “okay, we’re witnessing history here.” Nobody’s sitting in a professional environment and spontaneously applauding unless something genuinely special is happening in front of them.And then there was the stuff comparing him to legends. One user said: “15 saal ka ladka, 36 balls mein Bihar ka sher is turning IPL into his personal highlight reel!12 sixes + 5 fours = pure destruction. Vaibhav Suryavanshi isn’t the future… he’s the present and he’s UNREAL!” That’s the real takeaway. He’s not someone we’re grooming for the future. He’s already here, and he’s already rewriting the present.What made it all more real was watching what happened when Rajasthan lost the match despite his century. Video went viral of Sooryavanshi being emotional after the defeat, sitting on the dressing room steps, visibly dejected with staff trying to console him. Saturday wasn’t about sixes or records or stats. It was about the internet realizing that cricket has a new face, and this one just walked in and started demolishing everything in sight. The social media reaction wasn’t celebration. It was recognition. Recognition that something fundamental had shifted, and there’s no going back.