🏏 Chapter 26 — The Selection Gap Appears
Age: 13–14 Years (Time Skip)
Three years passed without announcement.
No dramatic montage.
No celebration.
Only results.
Near Dakshineswar Kali Temple, the city still moved the same—but Riddhiman Paul no longer felt like the same person inside it.
He had grown.
Not just in body.
But in control.
⚡ The Academy No Longer Trains Him
At some point, the academy stopped trying to correct him aggressively.
Not because they accepted him.
But because they couldn't change him anymore.
He was no longer:
a project
a student
a correction case
He had become:
a reference point
🧠 The Evolution Completed (Silent Phase)
Without anyone noticing fully:
Box Theory stabilized
Decision Layer became automatic
Timing Sovereignty became instinct
He no longer "thought" during batting.
He selected instantly.
🏏 District Cricket Becomes Routine Domination
Now matches were different.
Opponents were stronger.
But pattern was familiar:
structured bowling
disciplined fields
reduced mistakes
And yet—
he controlled all of it.
Match behavior now:
low shot count
high control innings
no unnecessary aggression
complete tempo manipulation
People started saying:
"He doesn't chase runs… he controls matches."
⚡ First State-Level Attention
Selectors began appearing quietly.
Not officially.
Just watching.
Always watching.
Because something didn't fit normal categories:
not explosive batter
not defensive anchor
not aggressive finisher
He was something else:
match tempo controller
🧍 Ghosh Kaku's New Concern
Ghosh Kaku watched him after a district match.
No applause.
Just silence.
Then he said:
"Ekhon problem shuru hoyeche."
(Now the real problem has started.)
Riddhiman asked:
"Which problem?"
The coach replied:
"Selectors don't know where to place you."
That was true.
⚠️ The Selection Gap Problem
In official cricket systems:
Every player must fit into a role:
opener
anchor
finisher
striker
But Riddhiman didn't fit any.
He was:
all roles at once, depending on situation
So selectors faced a dilemma:
Where do we select someone we cannot categorize?
🧠 Internal Understanding
Riddhiman realized something important:
It was no longer about skill.
It was about classification.
And he was unclassifiable.
⚡ First U-15 Shadow Call
One evening, academy received message:
"Observe selected district players for U-15 pool screening."
His name was included.
Not selected.
Just observed category.
That was the gap.
Not rejection.
Not acceptance.
But:
uncertainty slot
🏏 First Controlled U-15 Bowlers
For the first time, he faced proper U-15 level bowlers.
Stronger.
Faster.
More disciplined.
First over:
He struggled slightly.
Not failure.
But adjustment lag.
Second over:
He adapted.
Started reading release patterns earlier.
Third over:
He controlled tempo again.
Coaches watching noted:
"He adjusts mid-match… not pre-match."
🧭 Ghosh Kaku's Realization
Ghosh Kaku whispered:
"He is no longer developing…"
Pause.
"He is upgrading in real time."
⚡ Rooftop Night — Identity Expansion
That night, sky was different.
Heavier.
Calmer.
More mature.
Near horizon, faint light from Dakshineswar Kali Temple flickered.
Riddhiman stood still.
Bat resting beside him.
No practice.
Only observation of himself.
He realized:
I am no longer a player inside system.
I am a system inside players.
🏁 Ending of Chapter 26
Far below, Kolkata remained unchanged.
But above it—
a 13–14 year old boy had entered the most dangerous phase of his evolution:
the phase where he no longer fits any cricket category.
And somewhere in the selection system below—
a silent gap had appeared:
"We don't know where to place him."
