Sanju Samson

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Contents

Early life

Childhood

Krishnachand.K, March 12, 2025: The Times of India

For Sanju Samson, the rhythms of cricket have always carried an echo of the sea. 
Long before he became a familiar name in Indian cricket, the ideas that shaped his outlook on success and failure were formed far from stadium lights — in the fishing hamlet of Vizhinjam, on Kerala’s southern coast. There, amid the daily departures of boats and the unpredictable moods of the Arabian Sea, Sanju absorbed lessons of grit and perseverance that would later guide him through the uncertainties of professional sport.


At the centre of those lessons was his maternal grandfather Anthonis, a fisherman whose life revolved around the ocean. 
Sanju, who lived near Anthonis, watched him and other fishermen push their boats into the water before dawn. Some days the nets returned heavy with fish; on others, they came back almost empty. But the next morning, the boats would head out again. 
 That cycle of hope, disappointment and persistence left a deep impression on the young boy. “You can’t control the sea,” Sanju has often recalled his grandfather saying. “You can only control how prepared you are when you go out. Some days you come back with nothing, but you still wake up the next morning and go again.”


Years later, as Sanju navigated the highs and lows of international cricket, those words would return to him with striking clarity.


Anthonis was not a man of grand gestures. Life at sea had hardened him, teaching him to face storms and setbacks without complaint. He did not indulge his grandson with gifts or cricket equipment. Instead, he passed on something more enduring: resilience, humility and the ability to remain grounded, regardless of success.


Those values became particularly meaningful during the early stages of Sanju’s cricket career.
 Like many cricketers trying to establish themselves, he experienced both promise and disappointment: maybe a sparkling innings followed by a string of failures; or opportunities sometimes slipping away as fast as they appeared.


Whenever the young batter felt discouraged, his grandfather had a simple way of explaining things. A poor score, he would say, was like returning from the sea with empty nets. It happens. What matters is going back the next day. The greatest also fail sometimes, he reminded his grandson — even legends such as Sachin Tendulkar.


As a child, Sanju was also captivated by his grandfather’s stories about life on the ocean. There were tales of sudden storms, narrow escapes and long nights at sea — stories that stirred his imagination. Those memories remain vivid.


Sanju was born Nov 11, 1994, in Pulluvila, a coastal village near Vizhinjam in Thiruvananthapuram district. The region has long harboured a fishing community, where the rhythm of daily life is closely tied to the sea. Today, Vizhinjam is widely known for the massive Vizhinjam International Seaport project that is transforming the once-quiet town into a major global shipping hub. But during Samson’s childhood, it was a modest coastal settlement.
 Sport, however, was also deeply embedded in the Samson household.


His father, Samson Viswanath, served as a constable in Delhi Police and had represented Delhi in Santosh Trophy football. A disciplined sportsman, Viswanath encouraged his son to pursue sport seriously.


He noticed Sanju’s early fascination with cricket and remembers the doubts his son had after returning from Delhi, pointing out how the family never allowed uncertainty to overshadow his talent. “Sanju wondered whether he could really pursue cricket seriously from here,” he recalls. “I told him talent does not depend upon the city you live in. What matters is hard work and belief. If he continued to train sincerely, opportunities would come one day.”


Sanju spent part of his childhood in a police residential colony in North Delhi, where his father was posted. He studied at Rosary Senior Secondary School and began training at cricket academies in the city. Yet, it was a setback that would ultimately redirect the family’s path.
 When he failed to secure a place in a Delhi age-group cricket team, his father made a life-changing decision. Convinced that his sons would have better opportunities in Kerala, he took voluntary retirement and moved the family back to their home state.


Sanju’s mother, Lijy Samson, remembers those early days as a period filled with discipline and sacrifice. She says her son’s routine revolved entirely around cricket. “Even as a teenager, he was very focused,” she says. “He would wake up early for practice and come home tired after long training sessions. But he never complained because cricket was what he loved the most.” 
Back in Thiruvananthapuram, Sanju resumed his training with renewed determination. Much of his practice took place at the Medical College ground, one of the few venues in the city where aspiring cricketers could access proper nets and coaching. But structured training sessions were only part of the routine. The local ground near his house in Vizhinjam became another important training space, where he spent hours batting against friends and local bowlers. These informal sessions often continued until sunset.


Among those who closely followed his progress was Renil Arul Das, the secretary and co-founder of Lords Sports Club at Thennoorkonam near Vizhinjam. Renil recalls that even as a teenager, Sanju showed remarkable dedication. “He had extraordinary timing with the bat,” Renil says. “But more than that, he had a hunger to keep practising. He would bat for hours and ask bowlers to continue even after others had finished their sessions.” Renil recalls that members of the local club often encouraged the youngster by organising matches and giving him opportunities to play against stronger opponents. “Everyone in the area believed he had something special.”


The narrow roads and small tea shops of Vizhinjam also witnessed Sanju’s journey from a neighbourhood cricketer to a rising star. Locals remember seeing him ride past with his kit bag on the way to practice sessions. Autorickshaw driver Santhosh Kumar says the community still feels proud about the success of the boy who once practised in their neighbourhood grounds. “Even today, he is the same humble person,” Santhosh says. “Whenever he comes home, he greets everyone and speaks kindly. Fame has not changed him.”


Another local driver, Manoj K, says Sanju’s achievements are celebrated collectively in the locality. “Whenever he scores big, many of us gather to watch the match,” he says. “It feels like someone from our own family is playing.” Manoharan S, another autorickshaw driver, says Sanju is grounded despite his growing popularity: “He speaks to everyone with the same simplicity he had as a young boy.”


One of the coaches who helped shape Sanju’s early career in Thiruvananthapuram was Biju George. George remembers the teenager as a player who combined natural flair with an eagerness to learn while training at the Medical College ground. “Sanju had tremendous talent,” he says. “But what impressed me more was his willingness to listen and improve.”

According to George, Sanju’s dedication, hard work, and punctuality in training distinguished him from many other young players. “He had both the talent and patience to work hard every day. He sacrificed a lot, and thoroughly deserves this stature,” George adds.


For the fishermen living along the Vizhinjam coast, Sanju’s rise represents a source of pride that extends beyond cricket. Local fisherman Varghese T remembers watching the youngster practise, years before he became famous. “He was always respectful to elders,” Varghese says. “Even now, he smiles and talks to everyone. That is why people here feel so close to him.”


Even today, as Sanju plays before packed stadiums and television audiences across the world, the lessons of Vizhinjam remain close. In many ways, cricket resembles the sea he grew up around — unpredictable, unforgiving and impossible to control. And like the fishermen he once observed from the shore, he has learned that the only thing one can do is prepare, go out, and try again.


That temperament also sets him apart from another cricketer Kerala produced earlier — S Sreesanth. 


Both emerged from the same state but projected strikingly different attitudes. Sreesanth was known for his emotional and expressive personality. His celebrations, sledging and animated appeals made him one of the most colourful characters in Indian cricket — a ‘temperamental showman’. 
Sanju’s personality is markedly restrained. He is calm, composed and understated, rarely showing anger or emotion during matches. His leadership style is often compared to the quiet composure associated with M S Dhoni.


If Sreesanth’s career often reflected cricket’s volatile drama, Sanju’s journey has largely been defined by patience and gradual growth — a temperament shaped long ago on the shores of Vizhinjam, where fishermen know that success is never guaranteed, but the sea must still be faced again the next morning.

Career

As in 2021 May

Narayanan S, May 5, 2021: The Times of India


Some 15 years ago, on a chilly Delhi evening, Viswanath Samson took his 11-year-old son to Feroz Shah Kotla stadium. On the notice board outside, there was the list of children picked for the Delhi U-13 camp from the trials held earlier. Viswanath was confident that his son would make it as he had caught everyone's attention with his performance during the trials. But the father and son were in for a rude shock. The boy's name was missing from the roster while some others who seemingly fared poorly had managed to get in. Viswanath consoled his son over a pizza while returning home. Back home, an incensed Viswanath told his wife to “pack up.” The family returned to their ancestral house in coastal Vizhinjam in Thiruvananthapuram within weeks as Viswanath took voluntary retirement from Delhi Police.

Cut to 2013. Viswanath was back at Feroz Shah Kotla. This time on a posh seat in the gallery as Rajasthan Royals played Mumbai Indians in the final of the Champions League T20. The whole stadium was cheering for an 18-year-old boy who in the middle was hitting the Mumbai bowlers to all parts of the ground. The name that did not feature on the Kotla notice board all those years ago was on the lips of everyone in the stadium and millions watching on TV - Sanju Samson had arrived on the scene. After a debut IPL season, in which he won the Best Young Player award, the Champions League campaign reinforced his credentials as a star for the future.

Sanju, a wicketkeeper-batsman, has since gone on to become one of the faces of modern-day Indian cricket, the pride of Kerala - only the third international cricketer from the state after Tinu Yohannan and S Sreesanth - and a seasoned IPL campaigner. At 26, he has already broken plenty of records and seen many ups and downs in his career. Last week, he became the first player to hit a century on a captaincy debut when he hit a sumptuous 119 for Rajasthan Royals against Punjab Kings, reigniting debates as to how he has represented India in only seven T20I games so far after making his debut in 2015. While that goes on, it's worth looking at how Sanju overcame the pain of being overlooked at a young age and became the cricketer that he is now. A centre forward for Delhi Police, Viswanath realized very early that it was cricket, not football that his two sons, Sanju and his elder brother Saly, should play. “As a footballer myself, I knew in India football is not the sport that you should ask your children to take up, whereas there is a lot of value in being a cricketer in India. So I bought cricket kits for my sons when they were seven or eight and made them play with leather balls,” Viswanath tells TOI.

Viswanath, his wife Lijy and the two sons were staying at a police residential colony in GTB Nagar in north Delhi. The kids were studying at Rosary Senior Secondary School, one of the top CBSE schools in Delhi. Apart from the tennis ball matches among kids in the neighbourhood, Viswanath would often take Sanju and Saly to the police training ground to match them up against the cricketers there. “Sanju faced 25-year-old bowlers of the police team when he was just eight and he would have no troubles against them even when they bowled from just 15 yards,” says Viswanath.

Viswanath, however, knew that for his sons to make it big in Delhi's highly politicised cricket environment, they could ill afford any wrong turn. “In one of the school matches,” Viswanath recalls, “Sanju was out stumped off the first ball. I told him 'we are anyway 'Madrasis' and they are looking for the first opportunity to throw you out. Remember that while you're playing'.”

Just weeks after the disappointment of his sons missing selection at that camp in Feroz Shah Kotla, Vishwanath with his family boarded the Kerala Express from New Delhi. Upon their arrival in Thiruvananthapuram, Viswanath went straight to the Kerala Cricket Association (KCA) office to enquire about the prospects of his sons in the state. A selection trial to the district U-15 team had just been completed. Viswanath requested the officials to have a look at his boys. But the officials wouldn’t budge. After that, Sudhir Ali, a statistician with the association, took Viswanath to the Sports Authority of India (SAI) training centre at the Medical College ground where coach Biju George took the brothers under his wings.

“Fearlessness,” Biju says, “was Sanju's quality. He was a totally dedicated boy. He did not talk too much but was focused on his cricket. Come, practice and go back, no fuss.”

Sanju and his brother joined St Joseph's School in Thiruvananthapuram and travelled nearly 25 km from their home to the town’s medical college grounds for practice daily. “I knew Sanju was more talented than me and he could play for India one day. Till the age of 23, we both used to sleep in the same room but we never used to discuss the game deeply. If he ever needed help, he would come and ask and I would try to do whatever I could,” says Saly who played for Kerala at the junior levels before settling into a job with the AG's office.

“When Sanju was 12, he played a knock which, I still believe, is his best. It was a rainy day and the wicket was muddy at the Medical College ground. Sanju single-handedly won a school match for his team that day hitting bowlers to all corners and I knew this boy was destined for great things,” remembers Biju, who had been the fielding coach of the Indian women's team.

Sanju soon got into the Kerala U-13 team and captained them. He scored a century on his debut and finished a south zone U-13 tournament with four tons from five games. When he was 14, he was sent along with a Kerala senior team on an exposure trip to Australia. Aged 16, he went to South Africa. “We played against a province team led by former South Africa spinner Paul Adams. Sanju hit a six out of the stadium and into the streets. More than that, when we played a few T20s, he calmly finished off those games,” says Raiphi Vincent Gomez, the senior in the Kerala team who Sanju considers his mentor.

Sanju made his Ranji debut in the 2011-12 season and went on to become the youngest captain in the state's history. He was 20 when he took charge of the side for the 2015-16 season. But it was the IPL that catapulted the soft-spoken boy to fame that crossed international boundaries.

Though he was part of the Knight Riders squad in 2012, Sanju was released without being given a single game. In 2013, S Sreesanth arranged a trial for Sanju with Rajasthan Royals in which he impressed Rahul Dravid, who was the coach-cum-captain of the side. It was a passing-of-baton moment too in a way. As Sreesanth got embroiled in the spot-fixing saga, a new champion emerged for Kerala cricket. Apart from the two seasons in 2016 and 2017 in which he played for Delhi Daredevils, Sanju has been with the Royals ever since. His 2013 contract worth Rs 10 lakh swelled to Rs 8 crore when he was bought back by the Royals in 2018.

Sanju, though, doesn't get carried away by the fame and the riches that IPL brings. “However much success or fame we get, we should not change the way we look at people. Because people are special and I am mindful of that,” he had told TOI in an earlier interaction.

In 2018, Sanju married his longtime girlfriend Charulatha Remesh, who was his junior at Mar Ivanios College. “My life has become more peaceful and fulfilling after I married Charu. It has had a positive influence on my performance on the field,” Sanju once said.

There are some forgettable episodes too. In 2016, Sanju faced disciplinary proceedings against him by the KCA after he went out of the match venue during a Ranji match without informing the team management. In 2018, he was one of the eight players to be fined by the state association for dissent against captain Sachin Baby.

“It's his quiet nature,” says Viswanath, “that has landed Sanju in trouble. He is not a talkative person and that created some misgivings about him. There have been some misunderstandings but all that is in the past.”

Once a lean lad who relied on timing rather than brute force, Sanju has now built up the muscles to master range hitting, a necessary trait for batsmen of this age. And over the years, he has learnt the art of being candid and cheeky in front of the mic and on social media. His early initiation into the limelight makes it seem as if Sanju has been there forever. but he is still young and his best may be yet to come. One thing is for sure, he has already inspired many youngsters in Kerala to take up the willow.

Records and statistics

T20Is

As of 2024 Nov

Arani Basu, Nov 10, 2024: The Times of India

Sanju Samson in T20 Internationals, 2024
From: Arani Basu, Nov 10, 2024: The Times of India


Sanju Samson is just 50 international matches old. It has taken him forever to hold on to a consistent spot in the white-ball formats. Now, however, with two centuries in his last two T20Is — that too in contrasting conditions — Samson is finally close to raising his career prospects a notch.


Samson burst on to the scene as a teenager in the IPL a decade ago but ever since, has been parrying questions about translating his potential to performance. “Success comes along with failure and doubt. People ask many questions and you ask yourself many questions. 


“So, if I am getting a match like this, I think it’s been worth the wait of these 9-10 years. I’m very happy with what’s happening now,” Samson told the broadcasters after dismantling the South African attack in Durban on Friday night.


Vikram Rathour, India’s batting coach till the triumphant T20 World Cup campaign this year, attributes Samson’s struggles to not getting a solid run with the Indian team. “To be fair to him, he only got to play if someone was rested or with the second-string sides. One felt he was try- ing too hard to impress and outdo himself,” Rathour told TOI. Samson turns 30 on Sunday. He only still got to play in India’s last six T20Is because a lot of the first-choice players — designated T20I vice-captain Shubman Gill, Yashashvi Jaiswal and regular wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant — were busy with Test assignments.


However, it is now apparent head coach Gautam Gambhir wants a very different T20 setup going forward. “While playing in the Duleep Trophy, Suryakumar Yadav came to me and said, ‘You have the next seven matches. You’ll be opening in these seven matches and I’ll back you no matter what.’ For the first time in my career, I received such clarity, and that gave me confidence,” Samson said. Samson had four ordinary outings after the T20 World Cup but the team is now reaping the rewards of persisting with him.


Rathour offered some insight into what turned him around as a player. “He has become calm in the last year or so. He never complained when he didn’t get games and he was so calm even during the T20 World Cup.


“Captaining Rajasthan Royals has also helped him understand the needs of a team and what he needed to make an impact on a game,” Rathour said. 
 Samson has been an IPL superstar for most part of the last decade but maybe his sporadic selections contributed to his inconsistency at the international level. Samson himself talked about how his experience of travelling around the globe with India ‘A’ and the Indian team helped him get going in Durban straightaway.


Rathour pointed out a critical feature in his game. “He has the power to hit big down the ground. He plays fast bowling well and can take them down in front of the wicket. When you have such power to hit down the ground, you don’t need to try the fancy shots behind the wicket using the pace of the bowlers.


“He has realised that he doesn’t have to rely on reverse-sweeps or laps. That increases his percentages of playing a big innings. Even Virat Kohli did that in the T20 format,” Rathour, who will work with Samson at Rajasthan Royals as a batting coach, said.


The Test debacle aside, the selectors and Gambhir are clear about grooming T20 specialists for the next T20 World Cup in 2026. As of now, bilateral T20Is series are more like trial rounds for the players. It will be interesting to see where they fit Samson once Gill, Jaiswal and Pant are available again for the shortest format.

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