Updated On: 06 February, 2024 07:00 AM IST | Mumbai | Sunil Gavaskar
India needed someone to hold the first innings together with a big century as once again, most of the other batters got going like they did in the first Test and then gifted their wickets away

India’s Yashasvi Jaiswal celebrates his century against England on Day One of the second Test in Visakhapatnam on Friday. Pic/Getty Images
Yashasvi Jaiswal showed he is a quick learner by making sure he didn’t miss out on a hundred as he did in the first Test match by scoring a magnificent double century in the second Test. India certainly needed someone to hold the innings together with a big century as once again most of the other batters got going like they did in the first Test and then gifted their wickets away.
With the advent of T20 cricket and the need there to play unexpected shots, the temperament of the batters can sometimes be badly affected. The thinking that they can play an unorthodox shot and get away with it regularly can and does get them out. Test cricket is a five-day format and while most Test matches finish well within that and often with a day or so to spare, as was seen by the unforgettable innings from Ollie Pope and now from young Jaiswal, there is scope to play a match-defining and game-changing innings.