Jaiswal destined for greater things, says Sangakkara
The Hindu
Jaiswal’s focus and drive has been exemplary and the results are showing in his IPL performances
Yashasvi Jaiswal has been one of the consistent performers on the domestic circuit. The Mumbai youngster hammered two First Class double centuries last season and followed it up with three hundred-plus scores.
The 21-year-old has carried that form into the Indian Premier League for Rajasthan Royals, and is the top run-scorer in IPL-16 so far with 428 runs at 47.5. While he scored three half-centuries early on, Jaiswal hammered a 62-ball-124 — his maiden IPL century — on Sunday against Mumbai Indians.
Having made his IPL debut for RR in 2020, Jaiswal has matured as a cricketer and expectations on him, obviously, are high. The cricketing fraternity expects the youngster to break into Team India soon.
Former Sri Lanka captain Kumar Sangakkara, who is now Royals director of cricket, believes Jaiswal has a long way to go, not just with the franchise but also in international cricket.
“He is not just extremely talented but really hard-working. He spends a lot of time in preparation, in the nets, working on his game. He is very focused and driven and the results are showing,” Sangakkara said on Sunday.
Coming into the game against Mumbai Indians after a gritty 77 against Chennai Super Kings, Jaiswal remained calm and composed throughout the innings and guided Royals past the 200-run mark, even as wickets tumbled at the other end.
“He played beautifully almost entirely through the innings which was exceptional. He needs to keep working hard, keep producing runs and knocking on the door,” Sangakkara, one of the legends of the game, said.
Asian Games champion Avinash Sable opened his season in the 3000m steeple chase with a silver in the Portland Track Festival, a World Athletics Continental Tour bronze event, in Oregon on Saturday. He clocked 8:21.85s. Asian champion Parul Chaudhary took the bronze in the women’s 3000m steeple chase in a season-best 9:31.38s. Former Asian bronze medallist Sanjivani Jadhav struck gold in the women’s 10,000m in 32:22.77s, a time which was a second off her personal best, while Seema was sixth in 32:55.91s.