Stabroek News

India's show of bench strength eases transition concerns

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NEW DELHI, (Reuters) - India may not be contemplat­ing life after Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli just yet but the robust display of their fringe players against England will have eased any fears about how they will cope when the old guard steps aside.

Kohli, 35, is not playing in the five-test series due to personal reasons, leaving Rohit, a year older, to juggle the captaincy with the burden of leading India's batting.

With Shreyas Iyer, 29, struggling to meet the demands of test cricket and 31-year-old KL Rahul battling fitness issues, India have been left wondering how to plug the gaping hole in the middle order.

Behind the stumps, India have also been searching for someone to replace the neat glovework and uninhibite­d hitting of

Rishabh Pant, who remains out of action since a horrific car accident in 2022.

But three matches into the series against England and most of these concerns appears to have been addressed.

Seven months after Yashasvi Jaiswal burst onto the scene by hitting 171 in his debut test in West Indies, the opener struck back-to-back double hundreds against England.

The 22-year-old smashed a record-equalling 12 sixes in his unbeaten 214 in the third test in Rajkot which prompted comparison­s with former India opener Virender Sehwag, who was famed for his take-no-prisoners batting.

"India has a new @virenderse­hwag...," former England captain Michael Vaughan posted on X, formerly Twitter, calling Jaiswal "a player who will destroy many attacks in all formats exactly like Viru used to do".

In seven tests, Jaiswal has passed the 100-mark three times and converted two of them into double hundreds.

India will also take heart from the performanc­e of two players who made their test debut in Rajkot.

Middle-order batter Sarfaraz Khan has been knocking on the door for a while, and his twin half-centuries left many wondering why it took so long to blood the 26-year-old.

Wicketkeep­er Dhruv Jurel also impressed in replacing Srikar Bharat, who played the first two tests against England.

Jurel occasional­ly struggled to read left-arm wristspinn­er Kuldeep Yadav in the first innings but his glovework was significan­tly better in the second.

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Sarfaraz Khan

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