Clearly uncomfortable with his overnight celebrity status, Sarfaraz said he had, in fact, fainted after giving a series of interviews on Wednesday.
"It feels great to be chased by the media, but they tend to go a bit overboard," he complained.
"I fainted after completing my media assignments at 11 pm last night. More than the time I spent at the crease, it has been the media interactions that has tired me out," said the Mumbai cricket talent, who scored a mammoth 439 off 421 balls during a 456-minute vigil against a hapless Indian Education Society Secondary School.
His knock, which contained a staggering 56 boundaries and 12 sixes -- nearly a triple hundred in itself -- is the highest in the tournament, beating the earlier record of 427, set by Sanjeev Jadhav in 1963-64.
In the process, Sarfaraz also went past his idol Tendulkar's 346 not out, which the master batsman had scored for his school, Shardashram Vidyamandir, when he, along with friend Vinod Kambli, added a record 664 runs for the third wicket in February 1988, a world record for any level of the game.
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