MANCHESTER — India captain Rohit Sharma won the toss at Old Trafford this morning and opted to bat first on a pitch expected to offer early movement for the seamers. The headline selection, however, remains the inclusion of 17-year-old batting prodigy Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, who makes his Test debut today.
Sooryavanshi, the youngest player to represent India in the longest format since the 1950s, steps into a high-pressure environment. His call-up follows a prolific domestic season where he dominated the U-19 circuit with a strike rate that often left seasoned bowlers scrambling for plans.
“The kid has grit,” Rohit told reporters during the toss. “We’ve seen the talent, we’ve seen the temperament. Today is about seeing if he can translate that into a long-format reality.”
The decision to bat first is a calculated risk. Manchester’s overhead conditions are overcast, and the ball is expected to swing under the grey skies. By sending Sooryavanshi out early, India is betting on his ability to negate the new ball rather than shielding him from the English pace attack.
England’s bowling unit, led by James Anderson, will likely test the teenager’s technique against the swinging ball—a notorious hurdle for debutants on these shores. The visitors have signaled a shift in strategy, moving away from a conservative approach to embrace the aggressive, high-scoring style that has defined their recent limited-overs success.
If Sooryavanshi finds his rhythm early, he could set the tone for a series that India is desperate to dominate. If he fails, the pressure shifts immediately to the middle order, where the experienced core will be forced to recover from a potential top-order collapse.
The match is underway. All eyes are on the teenager at the non-striker’s end.
