SKY plays like he is in a hurry. As if he is running out of time.
Maybe it is true - he is running out of time. He is 32 and in a country like India, it will not be long before someone takes his place.
I am as old as he is, and if you ask me, the last 10 years have flown by faster than a SKY innings. It is only yesterday that I was 22, and maybe it is the same for SKY.
2 years earlier, when he became 30, he probably felt he will never get a chance to wear the blue shirt. India has more cricketers than any other country, and a batting culture that produced technically astute, hungry run machines on a conveyor belt.
Yet amidst all of this, he finds himself on top of the T20 world and under a spotlight that he has never been in his life before.
He will not make or break any records, he will not score 10,000 runs, he will not become a captain, he does not have to worry about major endorsements and sponsorships.
He is purely living in the moment and having the time of his life before the dream ends for him.
He is not just fascinating because of his taking T20 batting to a whole new level but also because of what he represents and because of the circumstances that have shaped him.
Although history books will not remember him, he is probably already inspiring young Indian kids to become the next SKY.