Long wait could be over for Jurel at Old Trafford

Mr. Jindal
4 Min Read

Dhruv Jurel had a tough time behind the stumps in the second innings of the Lord’s Test.

Dhruv Jurel had a tough time behind the stumps in the second innings of the Lord’s Test.
| Photo Credit: AFP

Dhruv Jurel isn’t quite expressive. He is calm, though not often quiet. He comes with a positive mindset, and is always ready to put in the hard yards.

The son of an army man, he focuses on ‘process’ and ‘discipline’. Those two words, he believes, have helped him grow as a cricketer. In a competitive environment, where opportunity doesn’t come easy, long waits may often make or break careers, and for Jurel, it has been a long eight-month wait since his last Test outing in Perth last November.

But the 24-year-old has taken it in his stride.

Ever since landing in England a couple of months ago, Jurel has featured in just two games for India-A, where he scored 227 runs in four innings and claimed seven catches. But in the senior team, Jurel has been under the shadow of Rishabh Pant, the team’s vice-captain and the first-choice wicketkeeper-batter.

While Pant featured in all three Tests in the series so far, Jurel worked closely with fielding coach T. Dilip and batting coach Sitanshu Kotak over the last several weeks to make sure he remains fit and in the groove.

When India had a long session at Beckenham earlier this week, Jurel was among the first few batters to have a long session in the nets. As bowling coach Morne Morkel aimed at Jurel’s stumps to test his outside edge, the youngster remained unperturbed and looked confident throughout.

And as India gears up for the must-win fourth Test at Old Trafford, India’s assistant coach Ryan ten Doeschate indicated that if Pant, who hurt his left index finger during the Lord’s Test, isn’t ready to keep the wickets, India could look at Jurel. In that case, Pant could be used as a specialist batter. Jurel, being a steady middle-order batter, could also add depth to the batting department.

However, if both Jurel and Pant end up playing together, it would be a selection headache for the team management. But sources indicated that Pant will be monitored over the next couple of days before taking a call.

“We don’t want to go through that again where we have to replace the keeper halfway through in the innings. We are just trying to give (Pant’s finger) as long as possible (to heal), and hopefully he’s good to go in Manchester in the first training session,” Doeschate said, adding: “Jurel is in the equation.”

In the previous Test, Jurel came in as Pant’s substitute after the latter hurt his finger, and ended up conceding 25 byes in the second innings, as India went down by 22 runs to concede a 1-2 lead in the five-match series. But it’s not just Jurel, several wicket-keepers have struggled in England where the ball wobbles a lot once it goes past the batter.

Despite earning praise from the cricketing fraternity, it has still been a long wait for Jurel. But now, with the series on the line and the team management not willing to risk Pant, he could just get lucky.

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