Cheteshwar Pujara

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This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

Career highlights

2016-19 Feb: MOST DEPENDABLE

Since January 2016, Pujara holds the record for occupying the crease for most number of balls. He has faced a staggering 6759 deliveries since 2016. India skipper Virat Kohli comes second, having faced 5892 balls.

2017

March: world No.2

Pujara jumps to career-best No. 2 spot, Mar 22, 2017: The Times of India

Test Batsmen ranking, as on March 22, 2017; The Times of India, March 22, 2017

Indian players continued to rule the International Cricket Council's (ICC) Test rankings as Ranchi double-centurion Cheteshwar Pujara gained four spots to a career-best No.2 spot. Pujara replaced New Zealand captain Kane Williamson to take the second spot.

2018

2018: Batting outside sub-continent slows down

Partha Bhaduri, July 25, 2018: The Times of India

Cheteshwar Pujara’s performance in test cricket, 2010- mid-July 2018
From: Partha Bhaduri, July 25, 2018: The Times of India
Cheteshwar Pujara’s strike rate and average in test cricket, 2010- mid-July 2018
From: Partha Bhaduri, July 25, 2018: The Times of India
Cheteshwar Pujara, as on 1 Aug 2018
From: August 2, 2018: The Times of India


Why is Pujara, India’s Test batting specialist, under so much pressure to perform? Is he trying too hard to rework his game according to the team management’s requirements? Or are there more fundamental technical problems which have hampered his performance outside the subcontinent?

Most times at the crease, Cheteshwar Pujara looks like he has just teleported in from the past. Lately, though, he has worryingly seemed stuck in a time loop. For those nervously looking at the clock as the first Test against England nears, the batsman’s ordinary run of form this year may seem like a bad omen.

For Pujara, who seems cursed with that common affliction of intelligent batsmen — the tendency to over-think one’s game — everything may seem on the line. Each time he walks out to bat in England, his poor away record will hang over his head like the sword of Damocles. Every time he is dismissed, it will plunge an inch closer and sway mockingly.

This isn’t the way things were supposed to pan out for India’s successor to Rahul Dravid.

To be fair to the Saurashtra cricketer, being a Test specialist in the T20 era is a hard job. For a batsman of such rare defensive skills as the stoic Pujara, it is easy to be misunderstood. With most teams paying scant respect to the virtues of patience even in longform cricket, being forever hauled up for a ‘lack of intent’ seems to come with the territory. Then there are the long periods out of the game as the multi-format stars ply their trade away from Tests. Game time is scarce, and so is quality bowling at the first-class level. Coming into form takes longer.

It’s easier to be lulled into a false sense of complacency against ordinary attacks. It’s only when the Test begins that Pujara may find he is half a second behind in judging that speedy incoming delivery. It is then that he may find the gnawing fear of getting bogged down welling up all over again. In such circumstances, honing the mind is the first step.

That last step is difficult but hardly impossible for established batsmen with established patterns of play.

For Pujara, it may be time to unleash a newer, refined, less cautious but more calculated version of himself. As things stand, he is far from being the complete, all-weather Test specialist he started out with the promise of being.

At first glance, there is no crisis. He was on a roll in 2016 and 2017, scoring 1976 runs from 22 Tests. There are no two ways about it: Pujara is among the best of his generation in India or Sri Lanka, where the slower, lower pitches allow him more time to get to the pitch of the spinning ball and use that bottom hand to nudge, cut, drive, flick or prise out the gaps. Of his 14 Test hundreds, 10 have come at home, where he averages an outstanding 62.42. It almost seems to follow that he has three Test tons in Lanka too.

But there’s the rub: that leaves just one Test century outside Asia, the 153 in Johannesburg in late 2013. So it’s the 24 away Tests that hide the story of Pujara’s inadequacies. In 17 of those Tests — specifically, those against Australia, England, New Zealand and South Africa — he averages just 27.09, a steep fall from his career average of 50.34. His strike rate falls to 40.25. Against these teams away from home, he has repeatedly got starts and squandered them. This is not to question his basic competence against stronger teams, of course, since at home against these same four teams he averages 61.70 and has eight hundreds from 27 Tests.

It could be that outside familiar subcontinental conditions, Pujara’s game needs fine-tuning. That much has been apparent since his first real dip in form at the international level in 2014 as India performed woefully overseas. It may be time for some reinvention; time to add another dimension to his game.

In England last time around, with all the spotlight on Virat Kohli’s struggles, Pujara averaged just 22.20, the worst-ever average by an Indian No. 3 batsman against England in England. That 2014 series also included a 117-ball 28 at Lord’s in which his strike rate was just 23.93, his worst strike rate in an innings of 25-plus. Interestingly, what troubled him was seam, more than swing.

For someone who likes heavy runs going into a big tour, Pujara has been experiencing somewhat of a drought lately. He averaged just 14.33 from 12 innings for Yorkshire, including taking 70 minutes to get off the mark against Surrey. His Test average this year is below 20, and strike rate below 36. Having scored 88.59% of his runs at No. 3, in his last 2 Test innings he has found himself batting at No. 4. Add to that dodgy knees, a dubious run-out reputation and a few occasions in which he has been dropped in the recent past.

In an era of grandstanding with the bat, Pujara’s staying power at the crease is at the core of India’s Test success away from home. But how much is too much? Right now, he seems stuck between two worlds, caught in two minds on whether to enforce the pace or be dictated by proceedings. It may well be that the team management planted the seeds of doubt, as Pujara himself has hinted, but good batsmen are known to defy the odds and deliver.

Pujara has parked himself in England well in advance, and been picking Joe Root’s brains too. Now he must look within and rediscover his strengths. If he can reprise some of that innate old-world resilience, everyone’s favourite batting anachronism will have done his duty.

2018: after 108 innings

December 7, 2018: The Times of India

Pujara vis-à-vis Dravid, after 108 innings
From: December 7, 2018: The Times of India

See graphic:

Pujara vis-à-vis Dravid, after 108 innings


Cheteshwar Pujara has always been touted as Rahul Dravid's replacement since the time senior batsman retired from the Test cricket in 2012 but he has often been criticised for not being upto the mark outside the Indian subcontinent.

Pujara may find his name behind Dravid when the comparisons are drawn between the two batsmen but when it comes to statistics the 30-year-old is at par with his senior pro.

Puajra bailed India out of trouble with his maiden hundred in Australia on the first day of the first Test in Adelaide. He compiled a patient 123 in hot and difficult conditions to help India 250/9 at stumps.

In the process, Pujara has emulated Dravid's feat of reaching 5000 Test runs in 108 innings. It is only a coincidence that Pujara had also taken the same number of innings as Dravid to get to 3000 runs (67 innings) and 4000 Test runs (84 innings).

Runs Dravid (No. of innings) Pujara (No. of innings)
3000 runs 67 67
4000 runs 84 84
5000 runs 108 108

Pujara showed the grit and gumption that is typical of him en route a 246-ball 123 that kept India in the game after being reduced to 127 for six in the 50th over.

It took a brilliant direct from Pat Cummins to remove him on what happened to be the final ball of an absorbing day one of the four-Test series.

He also ranked his gritty hundred among the top five of his 16 centuries in the longest format. "It (Thursday's knock) is one of my top innings in Test cricket, I could say top five. I can't rate if it was one of the best but the teammates were appreciating, they were saying it was one of the best," Pujara said.

This was the second overseas hundred for Pujara this year, after his effort in Southampton against England. He also scored fighting half-centuries in the two Test wins at Johannesburg (against South Africa) and Nottingham (against England).


2018- 23 Jan: Test cricket; vs Australia

Arani Basu, February 17, 2023: The Times of India


2018- 23 Jan: Pujara in Test cricket; and vs Australia
From: Arani Basu, February 17, 2023: The Times of India

New Delhi : Exactly a year ago, Cheteshwar Pujara’s chances of making it to his 100th Test seemed to have diminished drastically when the selectors decided to leave him out for the home series against Sri Lanka. He was at 95 Tests then. On Thursday morning, the eve of the second Test against Australia at the Arun Jaitley Stadium, Pujara turned up with a beaming smile after a light optional nets session. The pride of representing India in a Test match for the 100th time was unmistakable.


Pujara understands he isn’t the quintessential hitman like most modern-day batters. He is, instead, the calm in the chaos. “I am the same Cheteshwar as a person. If you speak to people who know me, I am the same person and I don’t think you need to change if you are a good human being,” he proudly said. 
Being dropped last year surely shook things up for Pujara. At 34, the wiggle room was very little. He decided to skip IPL auctions, no doubt because he has gone unsold for most of the last six-seven auctions. The deal to play with Sussex in the English county championship came his way. But he needed a clear plan before that stint began. 
“I had already spoken to Rahul (Dravid) bhai and Vicky (Vikram Rathour) p aaji. Although I was left out of the team, I had clear communication aboutcertain things which I had to work on,” Pujara said. The specific work was mostly about opening up more scoring options in his batting. His strike rate and habit of getting stuck drew much criticism. “I know how I got success in the first 5-7 years of my career. The most important part is you need to be mentally strong, believe in yourself and I backed that throughout my career,” he said with a smile while referring to R Ashwin’s recent comment on his stubbornness.


The perception grew that Pujara couldn’t take the opposition on as the runs dried up. His Test average started plummeting like the air pressure of a leaking tyre. “You can’t change your entire game because there are players who are also playing the white-ball game and their style of play was different, I understand that,” he said. Being just a Test specialist didn’t help. “It’s challenge. A Test specialist must keep challenging himself and play domestic cricket while looking forward to international games,” he said. The stubbornness, 
however, doesn’t reflect in his preparation to resurrect his career last year. Having an open mind became the operative part in his game.


“I have added a few shots to my game in last couple of years and am continuing to grow as a cricketer,” he said. Then he went on to describe how he turned his game around.


Ironically, it came down to playing the shorter formats for Sussex. “Playing white-ball cricket for Saurashtra and Sussex really helped. I tried playing sweep shots against fast bowlers and paddle scoop as well. I want to implement these in Test cricket too. It made me a little more open-minded and flexible to changes,” he said.


Pujara has suffered enough bruises — both on the field and from critics. He has weathered it well. Pujara has done well at 35 to revive his career and become the 13th Indian cricketer to play 100 Tests. He has cracked the code.

2019

World’s best average against Australia

2019, Jan: Pujara’s performance against Australia
From: January 4, 2019: The Times of India
Cheteshwar Pujara- career, till 2019, Feb
From: February 12, 2019: The Times of India


See graphics:

2019, Jan: Pujara’s performance against Australia

Cheteshwar Pujara- career, till 2019, Feb

500+ minutes vs Australia

Cheteshwar Pujara- career, till 2019: 500+ minutes vs Australia
From: February 12, 2019: The Times of India

See graphic:

Cheteshwar Pujara- career, till 2019- 500+ minutes vs Australia

Test cricket

Jan 2016-18

Most balls played in Tests since January 2016; Cheteshwar Pujara- achievements
From: Sumit Mukherjee, January 4, 2019: The Times of India


See graphic:

Most balls played in Tests since January 2016; Cheteshwar Pujara- achievements

As in 2018, Aug

Cheteshwar Pujara in Test cricket, As in on Aug 18, 2018
From: August 19, 2018: The Times of India

See graphic:

Cheteshwar Pujara in Test cricket, As in on Aug 18, 2018


2020: 50th first-class century

Pujara hits 50th first-class ton, joins Tendulkar and Dravid

Rajkot: Saurashtra cricketer Cheteshwar Pujara smashed the 50th first-class hundred of his career and joined an elite list led by Sunil Gavaskar, Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid. Pujara achieved this feat against Karnataka in the Ranji Trophy match at Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Ground. Gavaskar and Tendulkar have scored 81 centuries each while Dravid has 68 tons in first-class cricket. Pujara is the fourth active player with most firstclass hundreds. The other active players are Alastair Cook (65), Wasim Jaffer (57) and Hasim Amla (52). Saurashtra ended the first day at 296/2 against Karnataka and Pujara was batting on 162.

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