Cricket fans are absolutely thrilled and going wild over India A's explosive batting display in the Tri-Nation series final against Sri Lanka A today. Social media is buzzing with excitement after India A posted a massive total of 377/9 in their 50 overs. Fans are completely stunned by 15-year-old opener Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. He smashed a jaw-dropping 94 runs off just 29 balls, hitting 10 fours and 8 massive sixes.

Earlier in the tournament, Vaibhav was involved in a tense on-field argument with Sri Lankan players and was seen crying after a tough loss. Fans are celebrating his knock as the ultimate "revenge" and the best way to quiet the critics and players who trolled him.

They are calling his fearless style the "future of Indian”. While Vaibhav provided the early fireworks, fans are praising Ruturaj Gaikwad (40 runs) and captain Tilak Varma (67 runs) for holding the middle order steady to build a huge total.

Some fans are jokingly poking fun at the team because the projected score looked like it would cross 500 at one point during the opening storm, making the final 377 finish look "slow" by comparison. Supporters are happy that Ruturaj Gaikwad and the rest of the batters kept the runs coming. It showed that India A is not just about one player.  

 

India A posts 377 against Sri Lanka A in Tri-Nation Series final

India A scored a massive 377/9 against Sri Lanka A in the Tri-Nation Series final.The star of the match was 15-year-old opener Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. He smashed an incredible 94 runs off just 29 balls. Along the way, he broke the world record for the fastest half-century in List A cricket by reaching his fifty in just 11 balls.His fiery start helped India A race to 132 runs in less than nine overs. Later, captain Tilak Varma anchored the innings with a steady 67 runs. Anukul Roy also smashed 39 runs off 15 balls near the end to push the score high. Sri Lanka A now needs a huge 378 runs to win the trophy.

Sri Lanka A bowlers had a tough day as India A posted a massive 377/9 in the Tri-Nation Series final.The bowlers faced a brutal early onslaught. Left-handed opener Vaibhav Sooryavanshi smashed their attack everywhere, taking India A to 132 runs in less than nine overs. Despite the early beating, Sri Lanka's bowlers showed great fight to pull things back in the middle and late overs. They picked up consistent wickets to stop India A from crossing the 400-run mark.Spinners Wanuja Sahan (2/39) and Ravindu Fernando (2/72) led the recovery with two wickets each. Mohamed Shiraz also chipped in with two wickets to reward his team's disciplined late effort.