
Veteran Indian dough Cheteshwar Pujara shared his views on Yashasvi Jaiswal and offered insight into how the pitchors could soon reject it. 1. Day of the second test in Edgbaston in Birmingham was Jaiswal one of the Indian Standout Artists, scoring impressive 87 out of 107 ballsIncluding 13 borders.
Just as it seemed to be prepared for his test runs of the sixth century and 2000, Chris Woakes was his goal.
When Pujara was thinking about Jaiswal’s shifts, he noted that the pitchors must be patient and thoroughly targeting the good length of the off-foot cut to take advantage of its vulnerability.
“You have to mispat the right length -by turning to the foot, in good length. Continue to do it and wait for it to make a mistake,” Pujara said after a daily game.
India published 310 for 5 after Captain SHUBMAN GILL Hit elegant hundreds and sewing undefeated 99-running rack with Ravindra Jadeja.
“Jaiswal is missing opportunities”
23 -year -old Jaiswal laid a solid foundation with his shifts and helped India to reach 310 in 5 stumps on day 1, after 85 breaks.
Pujara, a veteran of 103 tests, noted that while Jaiswal soon had several nerve moments, he turned as soon as he settled, he adapted well to the conditions and the English attack.
“It soon looked as if he was trying too much to play shots, but as soon as he settled, the type of blows he played was excellent. Once he got over the initial half -hour, he has complete control.
“If you build it, it rides well. If it is an abbreviation outside the foot, it will cut well. If you try the bumpers, it will pull out confidently. It is incredibly small for him,” Pujara added.
In the three shifts of the ongoing Trophy Tendulkar -anderson Trophy, Jaiswal accumulated 192 runs in an impressive 64 average. Its highest score – 101 – came in the first shift of the opening test, which has lost five goals in Leeds in Leeds.
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Published:
Akshay Ramesh
Published on:
3 July 2025