India began on the 2nd day of the second test against Western India on the unsatisfactory note when the star opener Yashasvi Jaiswal, 25 short runs were moved than the deserved double hundred. Jaiswal was released after a terrible mixing with Captain SHUBMAN GILL in the first lesson of the ARUN Jaitley stadium in Nový Delhi.
Yashasvi could only add two runs to his overnight 173 before Tagenarine Chanderpaul. The left -handed opening man was left to be agitated after mixing and buried his head in his hands. He also could see how he exchanged words with his captain and seemingly trying to find out where the error lies in incorrect communication. | Indian Wi, 2. Test day 2 Updates |
The next day, Jaiswal pushed towards half of the area and set out on a quick single. But he timed it so well that the ball arrived at Chanderpaul and almost immediately appeared in the middle. West Indies opened it purely and focused on the end of the attacker. Yashasvi was halfway along the playground, but he didn’t get any answer from Gill, who seemed to have been in favor of his goal.
Jaiswal tried to turn back and whistle behind the fold, but was well short. Wicketkeeper Tevin Imlach rejected for a moment while gathering, yet the deposit managed to release the deposit just in time before Jaiswal could stand up. There was a short moment of confusion when Jaiswal urged the referee to check whether Wicketkeeper had completed the release purely, but the third referee confirmed the field decision.
Jaiswal looked broken when he got a long walk back to the pavilion. The wrapped crowd at the stadium Arnu Jaitley fell silent and shared the disappointment of seeing him to miss a double hundred.
Mix-up was not a mistake by Shaubman Gill because the captain did not try to respond to Jaiswal’s call. It was an unnecessary risk, especially in the daily game.
However, Jaiswal received permanent ovations from the crowd Delhi. After raising his seventh tests on Friday, he converted him again to a big score – he passed 150 in his career. Its 175 is now the fourth highest score of the Indian test dough that ended in escape. Sanjay Manjrekar is the highest when in 1989 he reached 219 against Pakistan in Lahore.
Despite Jaiswal’s unfortunate release, India continued his free score. Captain Gill reached his second fifty series with a series of sharp borders, while Nitish Kumar Reddy – promoted to No. 5 – looked firm to the fold.
Meanwhile, Western India fought their field discipline after leaning. Nitish was given a life 20 when Anderson Phillip threw him out of Jomel Warrican’s bowling. Warrican, who claimed both Indian goals on Friday, was visibly depressed after the chance dropped.
India passed around 400-run stamps for a loss of three goals about 45 minutes before lunch interval on day 2.
– ends
Published:
Akshay Ramesh
Published on:
October 11, 2025
