“Because in the end, that knock I feel is the difference. When you look at the match in itself, those 20-30 extra runs over par that they have scored is thanks to Sooryavanshi and Jurel. Otherwise, they have struggled big time if you look at the batting.”
“I won’t say I have locked anything,” Jurel said when asked at the press conference if the No. 3 spot was his for keeps. “T20 has become the toughest format now, because even if you score 240, 250, it’s not safe. What I want to be is the sort of player who can bat at three, five, seven, anywhere, and whatever the match situation is, read it well and win the game.
“Whenever the two of them [Sooryavanshi and Jaiswal] are playing, and they are playing beautifully, I should try to build a partnership with them. Not try to hit from both ends, because then we might lose a wicket. I am meant to keep the ship steady and take it forward.
“I don’t want my lower middle order to be batting in the 11th or 12th over. That’s what I have been doing, building a platform for the lower-middle order.”
“I would say everyone is becoming fearless in terms of batting, and it comes from the support staff, how they back the players,” he said. “If someone says you are going to play 14 matches, I am going to play differently. So that is the mantra behind it. They back you.”












