Fresh off India's triumphant T20 World Cup 2026 campaign, Shivam Dube could have easily basked in the spotlight. Instead, the all-rounder chose a quieter, far more personal celebration - one that said more about him than any match-winning cameo ever could.
With a net worth estimated between ₹30-34 crore in 2025, driven by a ₹12 crore IPL contract and rising endorsement deals - Dube's financial growth reflects his growing stature in Indian cricket. But just hours after lifting the trophy, it wasn't luxury or limelight that mattered to him. It was home.

India's emphatic win over New Zealand in the T20 World Cup final saw Dube play a crucial late cameo, smashing 26 runs in the final over to push the total past 250. While the team celebrated deep into the night in Ahmedabad, Dube's mind was already elsewhere.
The very next morning, he boarded a train to Mumbai. Flights were unavailable, but that wasn't the real reason. As Dube later revealed, the urgency came from something deeper.
"Ghar jaake mujhe apne bachche aur apne papa se milne ki kaafi anxiety ho rahi thi... isliye main subah-subah ghar chala aaya. Wait hi nahi ho raha tha."
For a player at the peak of his career, it was a refreshingly simple explanation - he just couldn't wait to see his family.
Dube's words painted a clear picture of his priorities.
"In my life, after God, my family is most important for me. I was really missing my father and my son... I couldn't wait."
That sentiment carried into an emotional moment after the win as well, when Dube handed his winner's medal to his father, calling him "the real hero" of his life. It was a gesture that resonated far beyond cricket - a reminder of the sacrifices behind every success story.
The journey itself was almost cinematic. To avoid recognition, Dube travelled in disguise - cap, mask, full-sleeved clothing - and kept a low profile throughout the trip. He stayed inside the car until just before departure, quickly climbed onto the upper berth, and covered himself with a blanket.
At one point, even the ticket checker failed to recognise him.
It was only upon reaching Mumbai that things became slightly more complicated. Anticipating a crowd, Dube sought a police escort at Borivali station to exit without chaos - a quiet end to an otherwise surreal journey.
In an era where cricketers are global celebrities with multi-crore earnings, Dube's story stands out. His net worth may now place him among India's financially successful athletes, but his choices reflect something far more relatable.
No chartered flight. No grand entry. Just a train ride home. It's easy to measure a cricketer's value in runs, contracts, or endorsements. But moments like these reveal something numbers can't - character.
For Dube, the biggest win wasn't just the World Cup. It was getting home in time to share it with the people who matter most.