Indian pace sensation Mayank Yadav, who has been hampered by injuries, is nearing full bowling fitness after spending almost a year sidelined due to a lower back stress fracture.
The 23-year-old caught
everyone’s attention with his fast pace in the IPL 2024, earning a spot in India’s T20 squad. Unfortunately, he managed to play only two competitive games in the 2025 edition due to his back injury.
Despite his fitness challenges, his IPL team Lucknow Super Giants retained faith in the Delhi fast bowler and kept him ahead of the auction last month.
“Mayank Yadav is progressing well through his rehabilitation and has successfully achieved bowling at 90 per cent intensity, with a current workload of 18 overs per week,” a BCCI official was quoted as saying to PTI, referring to Mayank’s rehabilitation at Centre of Excellence in Bengaluru.
“He has also demonstrated significant improvements in strength and conditioning, enabling him to approach the maximal fitness levels required for pace bowling.
“Over the forthcoming weeks, he is expected to progress to bowling at 100 per cent intensity, alongside the integration of high-intensity fielding activities, subject to ongoing symptom tolerance and monitoring,” the official added.
Riyan Parag Resumes Batting In Nets
The official also provided an update on India batter Riyan Parag, who is not playing in the Vijay Hazare Trophy due to a right shoulder injury. He last played a competitive game on December 6.
“Riyan has shown good progress following the injection to his right shoulder on 16th December 2025. He has regained full shoulder range of motion and is currently pain-free through all movements. He is continuing with a progressive shoulder strengthening and ground conditioning program without any limitations,” said the official.
“This week, he has resumed batting in the nets against throw-downs and spinners, demonstrating steady improvement in intensity across each session. He is scheduled to commence a progressive bowling and throwing program next week, alongside ongoing batting skill activities,” he added.
(With inputs from Agencies)















