Every IPL season throws up at least one name that wasn’t on anyone’s radar going in. In 2026, Brijesh Sharma is that name. You Probably Hadn’t Heard of Brijesh Sharma Before IPL 2026. Strong spells, a humble background, and a breakthrough debut have put Brijesh Sharma in the spotlight.
A right-arm medium pacer from Udhampur in Jammu and Kashmir, son of a labourer, someone who hadn’t even played senior List A or first-class cricket before Rajasthan Royals handed him an IPL cap — his story doesn’t follow any of the usual paths. And that’s exactly what makes it worth telling properly.
Growing Up in Udhampur — Cricket Without a Safety Net
Brijesh didn’t come up through a well-funded urban academy or a powerful state cricket system with money and connections behind it. He grew up in a working-class family in Udhampur, which meant that every step toward professional cricket required real sacrifice — his own and his family’s. The Jammu and Kashmir bowler grabbed his chance after a steady climb through domestic T20 cricket. From Udhampur to the IPL stage, the uncapped seamer’s rise is turning heads this season.
For players from smaller cities and less glamorous cricket regions, the path to the IPL isn’t just about talent. It’s about staying visible in a system that doesn’t always look hard enough at players from the margins. You can be genuinely good and still never get noticed if you’re not in the right place at the right time, playing for the right team, in front of the right people. Brijesh had to go and find those opportunities himself. His path to the biggest T20 league in the world feels straight out of a dream.
The Moves That Kept His Dream Alive
His cricket journey started in Jammu and Kashmir’s age-group setup, which gave him a foundation but not enough consistent opportunity at the senior level. So he did what a lot of hungry cricketers from smaller states end up doing — he moved.
First to Delhi, then to Bengal. Each move was a gamble. New team, new environment, no guarantees, no promise that this particular chapter would lead anywhere better than the last one. But moving was the alternative to standing still, and standing still wasn’t an option if he wanted to keep the dream realistic.
This kind of journey doesn’t get talked about much when players become successful. The moving around, the uncertainty, the years of proving yourself to people who barely know your name — it all disappears behind the highlight reel. But for Brijesh, those moves were everything.

Bengal 2025 — The Tournament That Changed Things
The Bengal Pro T20 League in 2025 is where the story really shifted. Playing for Smashers Malda, Brijesh took 11 wickets in 7 matches. That’s a serious return, and in T20 cricket, where wickets are currency, those numbers get noticed.
What impressed scouts wasn’t just the wicket tally — it was the type of bowler he appeared to be. He could swing the new ball, which is a genuine skill in the shortest format, where many bowlers are just trying to manage pace and length. And he showed enough control through the middle overs to suggest he wasn’t a one-phase option.
A young pacer who can contribute in the Powerplay AND contain through the middle is exactly the kind of profile T20 franchises are looking for, especially at the prices that uncapped players come at. Rajasthan Royals were watching, and they liked what they saw.
Rajasthan Royals Bought for ₹30 Lakh With Lots of Faith
At the IPL 2026 auction, Brijesh Sharma went to the Rajasthan Royals for his base price of ₹30 lakh. Not a headline number. Not the kind of bid that gets talked about on highlight packages.
But think about what the Rajasthan Royals were actually doing here. They were picking a player with no senior List A or first-class cricket to his name, based entirely on T20 league performances and the assessment of their scouting team. That’s a genuinely modern way of thinking about talent identification — you don’t wait for a player to accumulate a traditional red-ball resume if the evidence from shorter formats already tells you what you need to know.
It’s the kind of low-risk, high-upside bet that smart franchises make, and when it works, it produces exactly the kind of story Brijesh is currently living.
The Debut — March 29, 2026, Against Chennai Super Kings
Guwahati. Rajasthan Royals vs Chennai Super Kings. And making his IPL debut — Brijesh Sharma from Udhampur, Jammu and Kashmir.
IPL debuts can go a lot of different ways. Some players freeze. Some go through the motions and don’t make an impression. Brijesh got a wicket — dismissed Kartik Sharma leg-before — and gave himself a moment he’ll carry for the rest of his career.
It wasn’t a five-wicket haul. It wasn’t a match-defining spell. But it was proof that he belonged, and sometimes that’s the most important thing a debut can give you.
The Numbers Four Games In
Through four IPL 2026 appearances, here’s where Brijesh stands:
5 wickets, 109 runs conceded from 114 balls, economy rate of 5.73, bowling average of 21.80, strike rate of 22.8, and best figures of 2/14.
Let’s be honest about what those numbers mean. An economy under six in IPL conditions, for an uncapped bowler in his debut season, is not something you brush past. That’s not a player surviving — that’s a player contributing. The strike rate shows he’s taking wickets at a reasonable pace, and the best figures of 2/14 point to a bowler who can be genuinely difficult to get away when he’s on.
Rajasthan Royals will be pleased. More importantly, Brijesh himself has earned the right to feel like he belongs at this level.
What Kind of Bowler Is He Actually?
Medium pace, right-arm, with a game built on discipline and movement rather than raw express pace. He’s the kind of bowler who thinks about what he’s trying to do with each delivery rather than just running in hard and hoping.
His versatility across phases is probably his biggest practical selling point. Powerplay bowling requires different skills than middle-over bowling in T20 cricket, and a young pacer who can operate effectively in both is genuinely valuable. Add in his apparent ability to swing the ball — which doesn’t always translate across different pitches and conditions — and you have a skill set that should continue to develop interestingly.
Why People Are Connecting With His Story
Cricket fans in India have a particular affection for players whose journeys feel real and hard-earned. The Virat Kohlis and Rohit Sharmas of the world are celebrated for their greatness, but the Brijesh Sharmas connect with people on a different level — because their path looks more like the path most aspiring cricketers actually walk.
His story also matters beyond just one individual. For young cricketers in Jammu and Kashmir, in smaller states, in cities that don’t have the infrastructure or visibility of Mumbai or Delhi — watching someone from Udhampur make his IPL debut is genuinely meaningful. It tells them that the system can still find them if they’re good enough and persistent enough.
That’s nothing. That’s actually quite a lot.
Also Read: Digvesh Rathi Life Story — What’s Gone Wrong for LSG’s Mystery Spinner in IPL 2026?
What Comes Next
Brijesh Sharma is four IPL games into what could be a long career. It’s too early to project where he ends up or how far he goes. But the early evidence suggests that Rajasthan Royals found something real in that ₹30 lakh bid.
He’s done the hard part already — not just the cricket, but the years of grinding through systems that weren’t built for him, staying committed when easier options might have been to walk away, and eventually performing when the moment came.
The IPL spotlight has found him. Now it’s about what he does with it. From Udhampur to the Rajasthan Royals playing XI — that journey deserved to be told, and it’s only getting started. A labourer’s son, a strong swing bowler, and now one of RR’s most intriguing new faces.
A Name Worth Watching in Rajasthan Royals’ Pace Unit
Rajasthan Royals already have well-known fast-bowling names, but Brijesh Sharma brings a fresh energy to that group. He may not yet be the biggest name in the attack, but he is already showing signs that he can become a dependable option.
His control, background, and hunger make him one of the more interesting uncapped stories of IPL 2026. As the season moves forward, every spell he bowls adds another line to a journey that has only just started getting noticed.
For now, Brijesh Sharma is no longer just a hidden talent from Udhampur. He is an IPL pacer, a Rajasthan Royals debutant, and one of those players whose next match suddenly feels worth tracking.


