NEW DELHI: The innings began with a single off the first ball, but Urvil Patel didn’t allow the momentum to settle. Over the next eight deliveries, he detonated for a run-filled spell that rewrote what fans thought was possible in IPL openers. On a Sunday night at Chepauk, there was no gradual ramp-up from the Chennai Super Kings batter—only immediate mayhem.
Chasing 204 against Lucknow Super Giants in their IPL 2026 fixture, Urvil arrived at the crease after Sanju Samson departed in the fourth over. From there, the assault started without hesitation. He struck three consecutive sixes off Avesh Khan, with Digvesh Rathi repeatedly forced to watch the ball sail beyond the boundary. Even Mohammed Shami couldn’t stop the tide. In the space of 13 balls, Urvil reached a fifty at a pace that matched the joint-fastest in IPL history.
What made the start even more remarkable was a record that belonged to no one else before him. Urvil became the first batter in IPL history to hit six sixes within his opening eight balls. By the time he faced those eight deliveries, he was already on 41 not out, comfortably surpassing the previous IPL high after eight balls, which had stood at 33.
After reaching the milestone, an emotional Urvil revealed a handwritten message—“This is for you Papa.” His whirlwind knock eventually concluded at 65 off just 23 balls, featuring eight towering sixes. With CSK firmly in control throughout the chase, the side finished the job with four balls remaining.
Those who know Urvil well say this wasn’t reckless improvisation; it was methodical preparation. Three days before the match, the wicketkeeper-batter had already issued a warning to his coach.
“Mai dhamaka karunga”: Urvil told his coach that he would deliver something explosive. Speaking about it, CSK XI coach Prakash Patani explained how the confidence had been there from the start: Urvil had said that he would create a “dhamaka” around the time of the game, but even he didn’t expect it to be this huge.
At that point, Urvil’s extended run in the CSK XI came after Ayush Mhatre suffered a hamstring injury. Still, his intent was clear even before the LSG onslaught. In his earlier outing, after being dismissed for 4 against Gujarat Titans, he bounced back strongly versus Mumbai Indians with 24 off 12 balls, including two fours and two sixes. He then scored 9 off 17 balls against Delhi Capitals—less eye-catching on paper, but still marked by two big hits over the boundary.
Attack, regardless of circumstances, has been Urvil’s defining approach. During the DC game, commentator Ian Bishop captured the mood perfectly, saying the kind of no-nonsense hitting that Urvil brings was exactly what CSK required.
Urvil Patel’s 200-sixes-a-day obsession
The six-hitting phenomenon is not portrayed as luck or instinct alone. Instead, it is framed as the product of deliberate training, discipline, and focus leading into IPL 2026. Ahead of the tournament, Urvil made power-hitting the centrepiece of his preparation, committing to a demanding goal: hitting 200 sixes every single day as part of an intense routine.
Coach Prakash Patani described the grind at the PCCC Academy Cricket Ground near New Gunj Bazar in Palanpur, Gujarat. He said the preparation involved trying to land 200 sixes daily, highlighting how consistency at elite level is far harder than simply clearing the ropes once or twice.
Patani added that Urvil did not miss a single day, with the process continuing for more than a month. Training began around 5 am and went until 1 or sometimes 2 pm, with brief breaks in between. He also noted that much of the work didn’t even rely on a conventional bowling machine—Patani bowled to him using the support of a robo arm. The batter, Patani said, practiced with Kookaburra balls throughout.
There was also a strong hunger driving the regimen. Patani said Urvil was determined to make an impact in the IPL, often repeating that only a few people receive such opportunities and he wanted to do something different with his chance.
Urvil Patel: an elite six-hitter
Urvil’s ability can be assessed through one of the most direct measures of six-hitting efficiency in T20 cricket: balls per six. In simple terms, it shows how many deliveries it takes for a batter to clear the boundary for six. The lower the number, the more destructive the hitter.
In T20 cricket, Urvil has struck 90 sixes from 841 balls, producing a balls-per-six rate of 9.34. That places him among the elite group in this specific metric.
Within the category of major T20 power-hitters, only a limited set of players operate below the 10-balls-per-six benchmark. For context, Urvil is striking sixes more frequently than Glenn Maxwell, Heinrich Klaasen, Suryakumar Yadav, and Rohit Sharma.
His six frequency also translates to 10.7 sixes per 100 balls, further positioning him inside the ultra-elite “six-hitter” bracket in T20 cricket. While sample size always matters—many names sustain these levels across thousands of deliveries and across multiple leagues—Urvil’s efficiency already signals rare company.
The Dhoni bat connection
Before IPL 2026, Urvil was also given a special set of bats, including one gifted by India’s former captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Patani revealed that the bat had a heavy bottom hand and that Urvil used it during CSK net sessions. He said Urvil even told Dhoni that the bat felt slightly heavy, and Dhoni responded that it would help him generate big shots and that he should practice with it.
Patani added that Urvil trained with that bat in the CSK nets and later received a custom-made version with a similarly heavy bottom hand. It was that bat—crafted for the same feel—that Urvil used against Lucknow Super Giants.
As a wicketkeeper-batter, Urvil has long looked up to Dhoni. Patani said Urvil is grateful to share the dressing room and the field with the legend, and that Dhoni encourages him with simple guidance: “play the way you naturally play; if you want to become a great cricketer, always stay grounded.”
A relentless six-hitter in domestic cricket
Urvil’s reputation for boundary-hitting did not start with the IPL. In the 2024-25 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, he smashed a 28-ball T20 century, described as the fastest by an Indian and the second-fastest in men’s T20 cricket overall, with 12 sixes. A week later, he struck another hundred—this time off 36 balls versus Uttarakhand—again smashing 11 sixes.
In List A cricket, Urvil owns a 41-ball century, noted as the second-fastest by an Indian behind only Yusuf Pathan.
That season, he also hit the most sixes, smashing 29 in six innings. Patani’s comparison placed him ahead of names such as Abhishek Sharma (18 in 7), Priyansh Arya (23 in 9), and Rajast Patidar (27 in 9). It was not treated as a one-season peak.
In the following season, Survival managed 18 sixes in 7 innings, and the more striking detail was his strike-rate figure for the year: 243.75, the second-best for a player with at least 50 balls faced, trailing only Abhishek Shama’s 243.75.
Urvil was first brought into the IPL system when Gujarat Titans signed him ahead of IPL 2023 for a base price of Rs 20 lakh, though he did not play any match during that spell. He was later released before the IPL 2024 auction. Despite strong domestic showings, he went unsold again at the IPL 2025 auction.
His fortunes changed when Chennai Super Kings signed him as an injury replacement for Vansh Bedi during the 2025 season. He appeared in three matches that year and was then retained for Rs 30 lakh ahead of IPL 2026.
Now, after one unforgettable night of six-hitting destruction, CSK may feel they have uncovered the exact profile they were looking for: a fearless boundary-hunter built for the demands of modern T20 cricket.