Prithviraj Mangaonkar Jun 2026

With the help of other "memory-glitched" teens—a Koli girl who can taste the ocean in a drop of tap water, a Deshpande boy whose fingers type prophetic poetry—Prithvi builds the Nakal movement. Not to destroy the Algorithm, but to overwrite it with every erased story.

In the global arena of squash, where Egyptian dominance has become the norm and names like Jahangir Khan and Jansher Khan loom large in history, India has slowly carved out its own legacy. While much of the mainstream Indian sports conversation revolves around cricket, badminton, and wrestling, a quiet revolution has been brewing on the four walls of the glass court. prithviraj mangaonkar

Prithvi learns that every old surname in the Algorithm’s database—Mangaonkar, Joshi, Patil, Chavan—was not just a label. It was a living map: land, craft, lineage, and a unique way of seeing the world. The Algorithm flattened them all into numbers. With the help of other "memory-glitched" teens—a Koli

Spent five years (2007–2012) as a Senior Software Engineer, building early-career technical depth. While much of the mainstream Indian sports conversation