As Yuvraj Singh gets ready to hang up his boots, the dashing southpaw sets his sights on establishing a business kingdom. Can the Prince charm again?
Room Number 2535 on the 25th floor of Hotel Trident in Mumbai wears a sombre look. Three Mumbai Indians-branded blue luggage bags are neatly lined up in one corner of the expansive suite. A bat with a picture of a Phoenix and ‘warrior’ boldly inscribed on it lies on a sofa. Yuvraj Singh, sitting on a chair next to the window, looks pensive. Dressed in a yellow T-shirt and denim Bermudas, Singh has just finished his lunch.
“The hardest thing to decide,” the veteran swashbuckler confesses, “is the time to go.” Just a few days before the start of the Indian Premier League (IPL), Singh, 37, is mulling whether it’s time to hang up his boots. “I have had some great highs, and some big lows,” he says. “It’s my last year in cricket, and I want to go on a high note,” adds Singh, who made his international debut in 2000 but has not played for India since the tour of the Caribbean in June 2017. His steely resolve to make an impact in the IPL is reflected in his eyes. And he did make an impressive, and promising, start.
Debuting for Mumbai Indians this year, he scored a classy half century against Delhi Capitals in the first match at Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium in late March. His 52 off 33 balls at a strike rate of over 157 reminded viewers of vintage Singh. A few days later, he once again took his fans down memory lane in Bengaluru when he smashed spinner Yuzvendra Chahal for three consecutive sixes. It was a flashback moment for fans to 2007, when Singh smashed English fast bowler Stuart Broad for six sixes on the trot in a World T20 match.
His performance over the next few matches in the IPL was patchy. Though he looked good against spin, Singh struggled against fast bowling. For the Man of the Tournament in the 2011 World Cup—scoring 362 runs and snapping up 15 wickets—it has been a roller-coaster ride since he was diagnosed with cancer in 2011. Singh hasn’t made it to the Indian team for the 2019 World Cup in England. For the flamboyant batsman who has played in three World Cups and scored his career best in ODIs—150 off 127 balls—in one of his many comebacks in January 2017, it may well be the end of the road.
Back at the Trident, in March, Singh knows the agony of fighting cancer; making multiple comebacks since 2012 has taken a toll, physically and mentally. “It’s obviously hard on the body, especially when you are growing older.”
(This story appears in the 10 May, 2019 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)