All posts tagged: Rewired

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’s 72 sixes did more than beat Chris Gayle – they rewired IPL batting

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’s 72 sixes did more than beat Chris Gayle – they rewired IPL batting

For 14 years, Chris Gayle’s 59 sixes in IPL 2012 sat in the record books the way certain numbers do: not just as a stat, but a statement of impossibility. No one came close. Gayle that season was operating at a frequency the format hadn’t seen before. 733 runs, a century, eight fifties, and a strike rate of 162 that made even the best batters look slow. He was the universe boss, and 2012 was his throne room. Chris Gayle for RCB in IPL 2012 and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi for Rajasthan Royals in IPL 2026. Then a 15-year-old from Bihar walked in and blew the door off. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’s IPL 2026 season, 776 runs, 72 sixes, strike rate 238, did not just break Gayle’s record. It rewrote the ceiling. But the raw numbers hide something more interesting: these two seasons, played 14 years apart, represent fundamentally different philosophies of destruction. The Same Violence, Different Anatomy Start with what they share. Both men ended with one century, a cluster of scores in the 80s and 90s, and …

How PRAGATI Quietly Rewired The Indian State | India News

How PRAGATI Quietly Rewired The Indian State | India News

Last Updated:January 01, 2026, 12:43 IST The premise is to bring everyone who matters into the same room, put problems on the table in real time, assign responsibility by name & return every month until work is finished Prime Minister Narendra Modi chairs a meeting of the PRAGATI, the ICT-based multi-modal platform for Pro-Active Governance and Timely Implementation, in New Delhi. (PTI) On the surface, the 50th meeting of PRAGATI chaired on the last day of 2024 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi looked like yet another high-level review. In reality, it offered a rare window into how India’s governance machinery has been re-engineered over the last decade—not through new laws or sweeping institutional overhauls, but through an insistence on execution, coordination and visible accountability. PRAGATI—Pro-Active Governance and Timely Implementation—was never designed as a headline-grabbing reform. It was conceived as a corrective to a chronic Indian problem: projects that began with ambition but ended up trapped between ministries, states, clearances and committees. Bridges took decades, airports spanned generations, and rail lines became symbols of administrative paralysis. …