<p>Mumbai: Young opener Yashasvi Jaiswal’s adaptability between formats and temperament make him stand out among his peers at the highest level, believes his childhood coach Jwala Singh.</p>.<p>At 22 years and 36 days, Jaiswal on Saturday became the third youngest from the country after Vinod Kambli and Sunil Gavaskar to score a Test double ton. He smashed 19 fours and seven sixes to make 209 from 290 balls against England in the second Test at Visakhapatnam.</p>.<p>“If you see his junior cricket, like when he was playing for Mumbai under-16s, he scored a double hundred, (also for) Mumbai under-19s, (in the) Irani Cup, Duleep Trophy and Vijay Hazare (Trophy). He has the knack of playing long innings with his aggressive nature,” Jwala told <em>PTI.</em></p>.Let Yashasvi play, do not over-hype achievements: Gambhir after youngster's double ton.<p>“He always puts pressure on the bowler because he keeps hitting the boundaries. This is how he has grown his cricket, his stroke-playing, his mindset. That is called adaptability."</p>.<p>“In T20 cricket, he plays (with) a different attitude. In Test cricket, he plays with a different approach. His adaptability and temperament is really different from the others and that makes him different from the other players."</p><p>Jwala said having long batting sessions during the coronavirus pandemic-induced break turned things around for Jaiswal.</p>.<p>“When he came from the IPL (2021) in Dubai, he was very nervous and he cried over phone saying, ‘Sir, my cricket is over. I don't think I will play (any) higher’. At that time, he was not a very aggressive player. He used to just play some good shots,” Jwala recalled.</p>.<p>“I realised that the way he was playing his cricket is not going to help in the future. That time there was COVID in India. I took him to my native place at Gorakhpur and I used to tell him to hit as many sixes as he can against in a big ground against the spinners,” he said.</p>.Yashasvi Jaiswal hits maiden double ton in Test cricket.<p>Jwala said practising stroke-making with the plastic ball also helped Jaiswal a great deal.</p>.<p>“He used to do lot of plastic-ball practice for pull and cut shots and also sweep shot against the spinners. I think that (was the) time he started developing many strokes and that really helped him,” he said.</p>.<p>“That really was a foundation of the way he's playing his shots and he is very, very clear when he's hitting. It was that point when he really transformed himself from a junior or domestic player to a good top-level player,” Jwala added.</p>.<p>Jwala also recalled his message to Jaiswal who had his share of self doubts in his formative journey.</p>.<p>“When he started playing cricket, there was a lot of competition in Mumbai. He used to say, ‘sir, how will I get a chance if this player or that player is playing?’ I always used to tell him that we don't take anyone's place, we make our own place,” he said.</p>.<p>“'Don't think that you will play in someone else's place. You perform in a way that people say, ‘he is a very good player and he should play’ and they will make place for you',” Jwala added. </p>
<p>Mumbai: Young opener Yashasvi Jaiswal’s adaptability between formats and temperament make him stand out among his peers at the highest level, believes his childhood coach Jwala Singh.</p>.<p>At 22 years and 36 days, Jaiswal on Saturday became the third youngest from the country after Vinod Kambli and Sunil Gavaskar to score a Test double ton. He smashed 19 fours and seven sixes to make 209 from 290 balls against England in the second Test at Visakhapatnam.</p>.<p>“If you see his junior cricket, like when he was playing for Mumbai under-16s, he scored a double hundred, (also for) Mumbai under-19s, (in the) Irani Cup, Duleep Trophy and Vijay Hazare (Trophy). He has the knack of playing long innings with his aggressive nature,” Jwala told <em>PTI.</em></p>.Let Yashasvi play, do not over-hype achievements: Gambhir after youngster's double ton.<p>“He always puts pressure on the bowler because he keeps hitting the boundaries. This is how he has grown his cricket, his stroke-playing, his mindset. That is called adaptability."</p>.<p>“In T20 cricket, he plays (with) a different attitude. In Test cricket, he plays with a different approach. His adaptability and temperament is really different from the others and that makes him different from the other players."</p><p>Jwala said having long batting sessions during the coronavirus pandemic-induced break turned things around for Jaiswal.</p>.<p>“When he came from the IPL (2021) in Dubai, he was very nervous and he cried over phone saying, ‘Sir, my cricket is over. I don't think I will play (any) higher’. At that time, he was not a very aggressive player. He used to just play some good shots,” Jwala recalled.</p>.<p>“I realised that the way he was playing his cricket is not going to help in the future. That time there was COVID in India. I took him to my native place at Gorakhpur and I used to tell him to hit as many sixes as he can against in a big ground against the spinners,” he said.</p>.Yashasvi Jaiswal hits maiden double ton in Test cricket.<p>Jwala said practising stroke-making with the plastic ball also helped Jaiswal a great deal.</p>.<p>“He used to do lot of plastic-ball practice for pull and cut shots and also sweep shot against the spinners. I think that (was the) time he started developing many strokes and that really helped him,” he said.</p>.<p>“That really was a foundation of the way he's playing his shots and he is very, very clear when he's hitting. It was that point when he really transformed himself from a junior or domestic player to a good top-level player,” Jwala added.</p>.<p>Jwala also recalled his message to Jaiswal who had his share of self doubts in his formative journey.</p>.<p>“When he started playing cricket, there was a lot of competition in Mumbai. He used to say, ‘sir, how will I get a chance if this player or that player is playing?’ I always used to tell him that we don't take anyone's place, we make our own place,” he said.</p>.<p>“'Don't think that you will play in someone else's place. You perform in a way that people say, ‘he is a very good player and he should play’ and they will make place for you',” Jwala added. </p>