Jaiswal Smashes Debut Ton, Rohit Scores Hundred Too As India Take Control
Yashasvi Jaiswal, a young man from Bhadohi who toughened up on ruthless Mumbai Maidans, enjoyed his finest day on a cricket pitch with an unconquered debut hundred as India seized complete control on the second day of the opening Test against the West Indies. Skipper Rohit Sharma (103 off 221 balls), also eschewed his natural flair en route his 10th Test hundred and a record 229-run opening stand with Jaiswal (143 batting, 350 balls) as India batted cautiously but still did well enough to slowly bat West Indies out of the game, finishing the second day on 312 for two. In the whole day, India managed only 232 runs in 90 overs. Jaiswal, who batted the entire second day, has the seasoned Virat Kohli (36 batting, 96 balls) for company as the duo added 72 runs for the third wicket.
India now have a lead of 162 runs and are expected to bat better part of the third day before Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja is once again unleashed on an opposition that doesn't have enough technical wherewithal to counter them for two days.
The 21-year-old Jaiswal and 36-year-old Rohit are players, who could be called antithesis to what Mumbai school of 'Khadoos' batsmanship stands for. Both are flamboyant in their own rights.
But on Thursday, they channelised their inner 'Khadoos Mumbaikar' as Jaiswal took 215 balls to become the 14th Indian debutant to score hundred while Rohit had to wait for 220 balls to reach his landmark.
After 41 long years, since India's 1982 tour of England where Suru Nayak and Sunil Gavaskar opened, there were two Mumbai men opening for the country and put up the best ever stand of 229 against the West Indies, beating previous best of 201 set by Sanjay Bangar and Virender Sehwag back in 2001.
The Windsor Park track was a two-paced one where the ball gripped and there was some slow turn on offer. On tracks like these, it is difficult to score quickly but at the same time not too tough to hang around grinding the opposition to submission.
It was old fashioned Test match batting at its best. Jaiswal and Rohit did just that. Both trusted their defensive game when they found deliveries gripping, waited for the loose deliveries as none of the West Indies bowlers looked threatening.
Jaiswal's hundred is certain to bring in its fair share of euphoria among fans as his is an endearing rags to riches success story.
The story of selling Panipuris on Mumbai's Azad Maidan, climbing on boundary wall to catch a glimpse of IPL on giant screen warms the cockles of your heart and one wants to see the young man succeed.
As he played what seemed like a half-sweep-half lap shot towards backward square leg for a single, Jaiswal let out a huge roar of relief and took a bow towards dressing room. His innings had 14 fours and the best was the pull off Alzarri Joseph that got him to his fifty.
What stood out on the day was his solid technique, fair idea about where his off-stump was and a very assured footwork against spinners. Add his impressive temperament in this cocktail -- enormous patience and choice of loose deliveries -- he looks like a ready package for international cricket.
What this century proved is that he belongs to international level but on this track against an attack that was low on potency, one can't judge how he would fair in tougher conditions like South Africa and Australia.
May be it was the attack and nature of the pitch that made a free-flowing stroke-maker like Rohit not that ecstatic even after scoring a hundred.
The best stroke of the day came from Rohit, whose flicked six over deep mid-wicket off Joseph (0/65 in 14 overs) was worth million dollars. There was another effortless six in the same region off left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican along with a backfoot square cut. The India skipper was out immediately after scoring his 10th Test hundred when his defensive prod off debutant Alick Athanaze's off-break ballooned up for keeper Joshua Da Silva to complete an easy catch.
Shubman Gill's (6 off 10 balls) first game as No. 3 didn't start off well as he paid the price for sitting in the dug out with pads on for nearly 76 overs.
After a sedate first session that yielded 66 runs, the second session was most productive with 99 runs while it again tapered off in the third session that produced 67 runs.
In fact such was the slowness of the track that Jaiswal was heard on stump microphone telling Kohli "Zorse maar raha hoon, jaa hi nahi raha (I am hitting powerfully but the ball isn't travelling)." Jaiswal became the third Indian opener after Shikhar Dhawan (vs Australia in 2013) and Prithvi Shaw (vs West Indies 2018) to score a hundred on Test debut.
While Dhawan could never replicate that afternoon in Mohali in his next 33 games, Shaw, who was the biggest thing coming out of Mumbai batting stable, lost his way a bit after a blazing start to his international career.
Jaiswal would feel that this start is the foundation of lot of bigger things to come in coming days.
from NDTV Sports-Latest https://ift.tt/Q2doDbe
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