IND vs Eng | ‘Learned a lot from Rohit Bhai, Virat Bhai’: Yashasvi Jaiswal credited the seniors after the Grity Oval Ton. Cricket news

Timesofindia.com in London:Yashasvi Jaiswal once again proved why he has become the Tormeter-in-Chief of England, built another memorable test century on 3 of the series day at 3 of the series. The 23-year-old left-handed batsman scored fourth hundred and sixth in tests against a commanding 118-England-to set India a difficult target of 374 and to help seize the control of the final match.Go beyond the border with our YouTube channel. Subscribe now!Despite being dropped three times on its way for three figures, Jaiswal anchored India’s innings excellently, creating a significant 107 run stand with Knightwatchman Akash Deep, who scored a career-best 66. With valuable contribution from Ravindra Jadeja (53) and Washington Sundar (53 for 46), India posted 396 in their second innings.
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Among the stumps, England were 50/1, an impossible win required 324 more runs. Mohammad Sirj promoted India late by cleaning Zak Croi with a sizzling yorker off the last ball of the day.Speaking after the day’s play, a clearly confidently filled Jiswal said, “It was a spicy wicket, I was enjoying batting here. I knew what are the shots to play on this surface. Mentally, I was ready to push my back in my previous innings. I was trying to show up and show it. My mentality is always like.”Expressing his desire to convert it becomes more important, Jaiswal said, “I wanted to do more, make your innings bigger than that. Mentality is to go out and fight.”
On his partnership with Akash Deep, he commented, “He really batted well. We wanted him to play until he could play.” And when asked about Rohit Sharma’s presence at the stand, Jaiswal shared, “I saw him, and he gave me a message to keep playing.”Appreciating the influence of seniors like Rohit, Virat, KL Rahul, and Shubman Gill, Jaiswal said that he is constantly learning, “adding various challenges of tests in different countries, but learned a lot from Rohit Bhai, Virat Bhai, now KL Bhai, Gill.But perhaps the most striking statement was his firm belief in the opportunities of India: “Wicket is not easy, it will not be easy. We are quite confident to win.”England’s highest chase in the oval was set in 263–1902. If India succeeds, Jaiswal’s innings may be remembered as a knock that defined the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy 2–2.