Hardik Pandya didn’t overcomplicate it after the Mumbai Indians’ emphatic win over the Gujarat Titans. His message on Tilak Varma was simple and pretty telling: the youngster is gifted enough not to overthink things.
The timing of that backing mattered.
On April 20 in Ahmedabad, Tilak produced the kind of innings that can change the mood around a player in a single evening an unbeaten 101 off 45 balls, his maiden IPL century, as the Mumbai Indians posted 199 for 5 and then rolled Gujarat Titans for 100 to seal a 99-run victory. It was a huge result for Mumbai, not just because of the margin, but because it snapped a four-match losing streak that had started to drag the side down early in the season.
And honestly, the hundred didn’t arrive in a neat, polished way. That’s what made it interesting.
Tilak had crawled to 19 off 22 balls before the second strategic timeout. Then everything flipped. According to match reporting, Hardik had a blunt word with him during the break, urging him to get moving, and Tilak responded by hammering 82 runs off his next 23 deliveries. One minute, he looked stuck; the next, he was driving, pulling, and launching Gujarat’s attack with total freedom.
That turnaround gave Hardik’s post-match praise extra weight. The quote in the headline that Tilak is so talented he doesn’t have to worry too much felt less like routine captain-speak and more like a public vote of confidence in a player who had been under pressure. Before this innings, Tilak had managed only 43 runs across his previous five outings, and his lean run had become one of the talking points around Mumbai’s stuttering start.
The innings also landed because Mumbai badly needed someone to steady the night after an early wobble. Kagiso Rabada hit hard in the Powerplay and put MI under stress, but Tilak and Naman Dhir rebuilt the innings, then Tilak tore the game open late. By the end, his 45-ball century had entered the record books as the joint-fastest hundred by a Mumbai Indians batter in IPL history, matching Sanath Jayasuriya’s effort from 2008.
Once Mumbai had 199 on the board, the rest of the night belonged to their bowlers. Jasprit Bumrah struck early, Ashwani Kumar ripped through the middle order with 4 for 24, and Gujarat never really recovered. The collapse exposed just how quickly the game had tilted after Tilak’s late assault.
There’s a larger story here, too. For Mumbai, this wasn’t only about two points. It was about relief. The win pushed them upward in the table and gave their net run rate a lift, but more than that, it gave them a reminder of what their batting can look like when one of their core players stops second-guessing himself and just goes.
That is probably why Hardik’s comment landed the way it did.
Tilak didn’t look like a batter carrying baggage by the end of the night. He looked like a player who had suddenly remembered exactly how good he is. And for Mumbai Indians, that might be the most important part of all.
