** EDS: File of Sight ** Indore: This Thursday, March 2, 2023 File Photo, India Cheteshwar Pujara Playing During the test cricket match in Indore. 37 -year -old Pujara announced his retirement from all forms of Indian cricket. (PTI Photo/Ravi Choudhary) (PTI08_24_2025_000047A)
Australia’s female team captain Alyssa Healy and his wife Mitchell Starc made a surprising revelation about how the male cricket team planned the goal of Cheteshwar Pujara. On Sunday, Pujara announced his retirement from all forms of cricket.Pujara, known for his defensive technique and the ability to tune the pitch, accumulated 7 195 runs in 103 tests on average 43.60, including the 19th century and 35 years, making it the eighth most difficult test getter in India.Pujara brought his absolute game in Australia, where this permanent Stonewaller scored 993 runs in 11 tests on average 47.28, with three centuries and five years. In Aussie Land, he faced massive 2,657 balls, overcame every blow, each hoop bowling quartet Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon went through it. He scored his runs in a strike of 37.37 and his balls for release increased to 126.5, the best of 66 overseas dough, which since 1990 played in Australia at least 15 shifts.The tour to Australia 2018-19 was monumental because India not only lifted the Border-Gavascar trophy for the first time under Virat, but also the Pujar 521-running the campaign also served as a massive peak, with an average of 74.42, including the best score of 193 and three centuries, one fifty. In seven shifts he faced a massive 1,258 deliveries because he exceeded the mark of 1,000 balls with the only batter.The best loan score is 206. He is the only Indian that a bat for more than 500 balls when scored that 202 out of 525 balls, almost launching for 88 overs.“I don’t have mental strength to do it. When you say that, it’s wild,” Healy said on a “Willow Talk” podcast.“And he was a huge part of these two series of victory against Australia because he held this bowling attack and exhausted them and made them work hard.“And I think they just stopped trying to get him out and tried to get the other end because they just thought it was too hard.”Asked if Pujara is the last of the dying breed, given that every young cricket around the world, especially from India, is a fed the huge diet T20, Healy said, “I wouldn’t think. He got stuck and everything we talked about was to look first to score first.
Vote
Was Pujara performance in Australia during the 2018-19 series the highlight of his career?
“While I think the conversation has changed over the years. It probably used to be, how do we keep it outside?“But you are currently thinking about the boys in the world cricket playing similar types of roles – Joe Root, Steve Smith in our group. They play a similar anchoring role and let people ride them, which I think is a really important role.”
