Updated On: 20 February, 2025 07:00 AM IST | Mumbai | Michael Jeh
Young cricketers are now being paid to do nothing else but practise, practise, practise. They don’t have to fit their training around a job or studies, so it would be a surprise if they didn’t keep improving

Australia’s Sam Konstas, who floored the Melbourne Cricket Ground crowd on Boxing Day 2024 against India. Pic/Getty Images
They say that youth is often wasted on the young. It’s not often that Australia imitates the Asian example but when it comes to the sudden obsession with youth policy, we are seeing a quantum mindset shift.
Most of the Asian bloc has always embraced picking ridiculously young cricketers to play international cricket, aided no doubt by what used to be a highly evolved school cricket scene. Amongst those luminaries, Sachin Tendulkar, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Dunith Wellalage, Shahid Afridi, Hasan Raza, Enamul Haque (both of them!) and Laxman Sivaramakrishnan were all under 18 when they debuted. Australia has to go back to 1953, Ian Craig, before they can point to someone in that age bracket.