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IPL 2027: Should Yashasvi Jaiswal Leave Rajasthan Royals to Come Out of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's Shadow?

For much of the last six years, Yashasvi Jaiswal represented the future of Rajasthan Royals. When the franchise invested in the young Mumbai batter ahead of IPL 2020, it was not taking a chance on an unknown teenager.

Jaiswal had already emerged as one of Indian cricket's brightest prospects through a stellar Under-19 World Cup campaign, while his exploits in domestic cricket had earned him both Ranji Trophy and List A debuts. Across the Indian cricket ecosystem, there was little doubt that he was destined for bigger things.

IPL 2027 Should Yashasvi Jaiswal Leave Rajasthan Royals to Come Out of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi s Shadow

Rajasthan Royals were not discovering a hidden gem; they were securing one of the country's most coveted young talents before the rest of the cricketing world fully caught up.

Over the next few years, that investment yielded exactly the returns the franchise had hoped for. The explosive left-handed Uttar Pradesh-born batter evolved into one of the IPL's most explosive opening batters, became a regular across formats for India and established himself as one of the pillars around which Rajasthan's future appeared to be built.

Yet as IPL 2026 fades into history, an intriguing question has begun to surface.

Should Yashasvi Jaiswal consider leaving Rajasthan Royals?

The question is not rooted in insecurity, nor is it an argument that Jaiswal has suddenly become less valuable. Instead, it stems from a changing landscape within the franchise, one shaped by the extraordinary emergence of a 15-year-old phenomenon named Vaibhav Sooryavanshi.

The Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Effect

Every IPL season creates new stars. Very few create a phenomenon capable of altering the trajectory of an entire franchise.

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi achieved precisely that in IPL 2026. The 15-year-old southpaw opener from Bihar produced one of the most remarkable campaigns in the tournament's history, scoring 776 runs at a strike rate of 237.31, winning the Orange Cap, MVP of the Season and breaking Chris Gayle's long-standing record for most sixes in a season. More than the numbers, it was the manner in which he dominated attacks that captured the imagination of fans and experts alike.

By the end of the season, Rajasthan Royals had become synonymous with Sooryavanshi. Broadcasters built programmes around him, social media conversations revolved around him and opposition teams designed plans specifically to contain him.

The teenager was no longer simply a promising cricketer. He had become the face of the franchise. That inevitably changes internal dynamics, even when another elite player is batting at the other end.

A Season That Shifted Perceptions

The timing of Sooryavanshi's rise is important because it coincided with a relatively modest season by Jaiswal's standards. The India opener finished IPL 2026 with 427 runs in 16 matches at an average of 30.50 and a strike rate of 152.50. Those are respectable numbers by any measure, but they pale in comparison to the standards he had set for himself over the previous three seasons.

In 2023, Jaiswal scored 625 runs at an average of 48.07 and a strike rate of 163.61. In 2025, he amassed 559 runs while striking at nearly 160. Even his 2024 campaign included a century and several impactful performances.

Against that backdrop, IPL 2026 felt like a season where Jaiswal remained good while Sooryavanshi became extraordinary.

For the first time since establishing himself as Rajasthan's premier batting attraction, Jaiswal was not the player opposition teams spent the most time discussing. He was not the player broadcasters focused on. He was not the player driving the narrative around the franchise.

The spotlight had moved.

The Captaincy Signal Rajasthan Sent

Perhaps the strongest indication of how Rajasthan Royals view their future arrived not through an auction or a batting-order change but through a leadership decision.

When the franchise moved towards a new leadership structure, many believed Jaiswal would be a natural candidate. He was already an India international, one of the most successful products of Rajasthan's talent-identification system and a player entering the prime years of his career.

Instead, Rajasthan handed the captaincy to Riyan Parag. The decision may have been based entirely on leadership qualities and dressing-room considerations. However, perception matters in elite sport.

From Jaiswal's perspective, it was another reminder that his position within the franchise hierarchy is no longer as straightforward as it once seemed. While Parag was entrusted with leadership responsibilities and Sooryavanshi emerged as the franchise's biggest attraction, Jaiswal found himself occupying a curious middle ground despite being one of the most accomplished young batters in Indian cricket.

For an ambitious player, those signals are difficult to ignore.

The Indian Team Traffic Jam

The challenge facing Jaiswal is not confined to Rajasthan Royals. Indian cricket is currently blessed with an unprecedented depth of batting talent, particularly in white-ball formats. Competition for places has become so fierce that even established international performers are finding it difficult to secure guaranteed spots.

The recent T20I squad anouncement for the Ireland and England tours offered the perfect example.

Shubman Gill, India's Test captain and ODI captain, failed to find a place in the T20 squad despite being one of the country's most accomplished batters. That reality underlines the extraordinary congestion that exists in India's batting ranks.

Shreyas Iyer has returned strongly. Tilak Varma continues to impress. Sai Sudharsan's rise has been relentless. Abhishek Sharma has cemented his credentials. Ishan Kishan also remains in contention. And now Sooryavanshi has entered the conversation as perhaps the most exciting batting prospect in world cricket.

In such an environment, every advantage matters. Leadership opportunities matter. Franchise status matters. Being viewed as the centrepiece of a project matters.

If Jaiswal ever feels that his influence within Rajasthan's long-term plans is diminishing, the temptation to explore alternative opportunities could become understandable.

IPL History Suggests Fresh Starts Can Work

The IPL has repeatedly demonstrated that changing franchises can transform careers. KL Rahul left Royal Challengers Bengaluru and evolved into one of the league's most prolific batters and captains.

Suryakumar Yadav struggled to establish himself fully during his first stint at Kolkata Knight Riders before becoming a global T20 superstar at Mumbai Indians. Hardik Pandya departed Mumbai to captain Gujarat Titans, won a title immediately and returned with enhanced stature and leadership credentials. Shubman Gill also realised and showcased his true batting potential in the IPL after moving out of Kolkata Knight Riders and making GT his new home.

None of those moves were motivated by fear of competition. They were motivated by opportunity. Sometimes a player requires a different environment, a larger role or a clearer sense of ownership.

Several IPL franchises would undoubtedly be willing to build their batting line-up around a player with Jaiswal's pedigree and track record.

After all, his overall Rajasthan Royals record remains exceptional. Across 83 matches, he has accumulated 2,593 runs at a strike rate of 152.79, including two centuries, 18 fifties and 110 sixes. Those are not the numbers of a player being pushed aside. They are the numbers of a franchise cornerstone.

Why Leaving Could Also Be a Mistake

Yet there is an equally compelling case for staying. The greatest players do not avoid competition. They embrace it.

There is no reason why Jaiswal and Sooryavanshi cannot coexist successfully. In fact, Rajasthan Royals may possess the ingredients for what could become the most destructive opening partnership in IPL history.

Jaiswal brings international experience, technical refinement and proven success across formats. Sooryavanshi brings fearlessness, power and an ability to overwhelm bowling attacks in ways few players can.

Together, they offer Rajasthan a combination most franchises can only dream of assembling.

The challenge for Rajasthan is not choosing between them. The challenge is creating an environment where both continue to feel central to the project.

At this moment, there is no compelling reason for Yashasvi Jaiswal to leave Rajasthan Royals. He remains one of the franchise's most important players, one of India's premier batters and a central figure in their plans. Walking away from a stable environment simply because another young star has emerged would be premature.

However, the conversation itself reveals how dramatically the landscape has changed.

A year ago, Rajasthan's future appeared to revolve around Jaiswal. Today, it appears to revolve around Jaiswal, Sooryavanshi and Parag simultaneously.

The irony is that Rajasthan Royals may not have a Jaiswal problem at all. They may simply have a luxury problem. Few franchises in world cricket possess one generational batting talent. Rajasthan currently have two.

The real question is not whether Jaiswal is living in Vaibhav Sooryavanshi's shadow. The real question is whether Rajasthan Royals can create a structure in which two generational batting talents are allowed to flourish without limiting each other's growth.

If they can solve that puzzle, Rajasthan could dominate the IPL for years. If they cannot, one of the most fascinating transfer stories in the league's history may eventually write itself.

Story first published: Tuesday, June 9, 2026, 22:05 [IST]
Other articles published on Jun 9, 2026
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