If you watched Punjab Kings vs Gujarat Titans in IPL 2026 and found yourself asking, “Who on earth is that?” — welcome to the Suryansh Shedge conversation.
He’s 23, he’s from Mumbai, and he just walked in at 47 for 5 against one of the better bowling attacks in the tournament and turned the game around with 57 off 29 balls. His fifty came off 24 deliveries. He barely blinked. But here’s the thing — if you’d been paying attention to Mumbai domestic cricket, none of this would have surprised you.
Suryansh Shedge went from scoring 326 in school cricket at 13 to hitting a 24-ball fifty for Punjab Kings in IPL 2026. Here’s the full story of one of India’s most exciting young finishers.
He Was Always Going to Be This
Let’s go back to 2016. Suryansh Shedge is 13 years old, playing in the Giles Shield — Mumbai’s famous school cricket tournament. He walks in and proceeds to score 326 not out off 137 balls.
Not 126. Not 226. Three hundred and twenty six. Off 137 balls. At 13.
That innings didn’t just turn heads — it made people do double-takes at the scorebook. The boundaries were constant. The sixes were coming in clusters. And the kid at the crease looked completely unbothered by the whole thing.
That’s the earliest version of Suryansh Shedge. Same player, smaller frame, same fearlessness.

Growing Up in Mumbai Cricket
Growing up in Mumbai as a cricketer is both an advantage and a gauntlet. The city produces more professional cricketers than almost anywhere else in India, which means the competition at every age group is brutal.
Suryansh worked his way through that system steadily. He represented Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy, the Vijay Hazare Trophy, and the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy — the full domestic circuit. Along the way, he developed into something more than just a big hitter. He became a genuine middle-order batsman who could read a situation and adjust accordingly, with a useful right-arm medium pace option to boot.
That combination — batting finisher who can also bowl a bit — is exactly what T20 franchises look for in the lower order.
The Domestic Moment That Changed Everything
The real breakthrough came during the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy 2024-25, where Suryansh played a central role in Mumbai winning the tournament.
Two performances stand out. In a knockout match, he walked in and hit 36 off 12 balls. In the final, he did it again — 36 not out, finishing the job without breaking a sweat. His strike rate across the tournament was above 250.
That’s not just power hitting. That’s power hitting with a purpose — coming in late, assessing what’s needed, and delivering it calmly under pressure. That’s a skill set. And it’s what got Punjab Kings’ attention.
Punjab Kings Took the Gamble Early
PBKS picked Suryansh in the IPL 2025 auction for ₹30 lakh — the base price. Low-risk, high-potential. The kind of signing franchises make when they’ve done their homework on domestic cricket and seen something others haven’t fully clocked yet.
His 2025 season was modest by his own standards. Limited opportunities, a few cameos that didn’t fully catch fire. Another franchise might have moved on. Punjab Kings kept him.
That retention decision looks very smart in hindsight.
47 for 5. Enter Suryansh.
The Gujarat Titans game in IPL 2026 was the moment everything clicked in the public eye.
Punjab Kings were in serious trouble — five wickets down, not many runs on the board, top order back in the dugout. The match was tilting heavily toward Gujarat. Then Suryansh walked in.
What followed was one of those innings that reminds you why T20 cricket is so compelling. He didn’t try to anchor things and rebuild slowly. He attacked. Good balls went for four. Bad balls went for six. Within a few overs, the momentum had completely flipped.
57 runs. 29 balls. Half-century in 24. Punjab Kings recovered to a competitive total they had no business posting from 47 for 5.
What Kind of Player Is He?
Suryansh is a batting all-rounder with a very specific job — come in late, take the game on, and score quickly enough to change what’s possible in the final overs.
He’s not a player who eases himself in. He doesn’t need three or four balls to get his eye in. From the moment he arrives, he’s looking to score, and that instinct is what makes him dangerous as a finisher.
His medium pace gives the captain options too. In a format where having an extra bowling option in the lower order makes squad selection easier, that’s a real asset.
Also Read: Meet Salil Arora: The New SRH Power-Hitter Making Headlines in IPL 2026
The Buzz Is Real
Social media picked up the Gujarat Titans knock quickly, and the response from cricket analysts has been largely the same: this is a player who’s been doing this for years in domestic cricket, and the IPL stage is just showing it to a wider audience.
The conversation about whether he could have a future in India’s T20 setup has already started. That’s the nature of IPL breakout moments — one good knock in the right game, and suddenly everyone wants to talk about what comes next.
Still Early Days, But the Foundation Is Solid
Suryansh Shedge is 23. He’s got one standout IPL knock to his name and a domestic record that quietly backs it up. The ceiling is genuinely high — but it’s worth being realistic that one great innings doesn’t define a career.
What does matter is the foundation. A childhood talent that was always obvious. A domestic career that developed real skills beyond just hitting hard. A franchise that believed in him before the big moment came. And a temperament that, in the moments that count, seems completely unaffected by pressure.
That combination doesn’t guarantee anything. But it does make Suryansh Shedge a player worth watching very closely for the rest of this IPL season — and probably well beyond it.


