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Anchoring or accelerating, Pujara was a great fit at No. 3

Anchoring or accelerating, Pujara was a great fit at No. 3

Posted on August 26, 2025 By admin


File picture of Cheteshwar Pujara celebrating his century against Australia, at the Jharkhand State Cricket Association (JSCA) Stadium complex in Ranchi on March 18, 2017.
| Photo Credit: K.R. Deepak

Had Cheteshwar Pujara been in the team, it is possible India might have won the recent series in England.

Once skipper Shubman Gill decided he was batting at No. 4, there was need for experience and resilience one slot above. India lacked a No. 3 capable of the long innings, someone who allowed their many stroke players to bat around him displaying neither ego nor envy. It might have been an imaginative selection. Admittedly, Pujara was 37, and his batting had been on the decline, despite two centuries and an average of 62 for Sussex.

Cheteshwar Pujara, India’s iconic Test batter, retires with 7195 runs, 19 centuries

Cheteshwar Pujara, India’s iconic Test batter, retires with 7195 runs, 19 centuries
| Video Credit:
The Hindu

At any rate, it is easy to be wise after the event, and Pujara had already taken the well-trodden route from pitch to commentary box. But it is an intriguing might-have-been. Sometimes picking a 16-year-old is seen as an inspired selection; there aren’t too many at the other end of the scale.

The late Bobby Simpson, recalled at 41, led Australia to a series win against India. Cyril Washbrook, then 41 and an England selector, was picked against Australia and scored 98 commenting drily, “another two would have done no harm.” England won.

Traditional role

Pujara and his predecessor Rahul Dravid reinforced the traditional role of the No. 3, the one batting slot largely unaffected by the demands of T20 cricket. In the line-up, that position is the one associated with efficiency rather than style, pragmatism rather than romance.

In Pictures | Cheteshwar Pujara, one of the foremost Test specialists in 21st century, retires

Former Indian batter Cheteshwar Pujara announced his retirement from all forms of cricket on August 24, 2025. Pujara is most remembered for India’s Border-Gavaskar Trophy triumph in Australia in 2018 and 2020. He troubled Australia with his solid defence and technique.

In the 2020-21 Border-Gavaskar Trophy series, he scored 271 runs from four matches at an average of 33.87, with three fifties and a best score of 77. In the final Test at The Gabba, he endured several body blows from Australian pacers on his body, making the win even more memorable.

Pujara was all about classical batsmanship marinated in Test whites. Pujara has played 103 Tests scoring 7,195 runs with 206 not out being his highest score. He has scored 19 centuries along with 35 half-centuries.

Solidity at the crease and a sense of dignity remained Cheteshwar Pujara’s special attributes.

In first class cricket, he has played 278 matches scoring 21,301 runs with 352 being his highest. His average in first-class cricket is 51.82. He has scored 66 centuries and 81 half-centuries.

The crowd’s raucous affection was reserved for Tendulkar and Kohli, while for Dravid and his successor Pujara, there was muted respect. Incidentally Pujara made his Test debut in Dravid’s hometown Bengaluru in 2010, and that too against Australia, an opponent he often defied through his storied career.

Cheteshwar Pujara also has played 71 T20 matches scoring 1,556 runs with 100 being his best.

In an age of bling, mighty sixes and hyperbole, Cheteshwar Pujara was an exception. The old-fashioned batter was eager to grind out attacks, took blows on his body, and often laid the foundation for his more effervescent team-mates like Virat Kohli to prosper.

Cheteshwar Pujara rings the five-minute bell before the start of the third day of the third Test match between India and England, at the Lord’s Cricket Ground, in London on July 12, 2025. series. Anil Kumble, who coached India during part of Pujara’s career, hailed him as a true ambassador of the game. “Congratulations on a fantastic career! You have been a great ambassador of this wonderful game,” he said.

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Walter Hammond, he of the silken cover drive, and occasionally the likes of Joe Root and Viv Richards have batted at three but Kumar Sangakkara, tough as nails, made the most runs from that position. He was the ideal modern No. 3 — left-handed, capable of both the long, defensive innings (he had 11 double centuries including a triple) and the short attacking one, and a superb reader of the game situation.

Like for like: File picture of Pujara with Rahul Dravid in Chennai

Like for like: File picture of Pujara with Rahul Dravid in Chennai
| Photo Credit:
K. Pichumani

Garry Sobers made the then world record score of 365 at No. 3, as did Brian Lara who broke that record. It was the home of men like Don Bradman (who averaged over 100 there), and Ricky Ponting, whose wickets were most priced by the opposition, and who had the range and skill to knuckle down in defence or build on a good opening stand so those who followed found life easier.

Psychologically crucial

Possibly because the No. 3 tended to be the one controlling the innings, many of them have led their countries. Some have even opened the innings in emergencies — the theory (mistaken) being that if you are good enough to come in at the fall of the first wicket in the first over, then you are good enough to open. This ignores the fact that No. 3 is not merely a physical position, an arithmetical necessity, but a psychologically crucial one calling for a set of unique attributes including the ability to anchor or accelerate as the situation demands.

Both Dravid and Pujara have opened, the former adding 410 with Virender Sehwag against Pakistan, and the latter carrying his bat against Sri Lanka, remaining unbeaten on 145 at the end of the innings.

Perhaps I exaggerated earlier about having Pujara in England. What we needed was someone Pujara-like, willing to take the body blows, frustrate bowlers and viewers alike. That last is merely a public perception, and like many such, is incorrect.

Pujara had a better strike rate than David Boon and Neil Harvey of Australia, England’s Dennis Compton and around the same as Desmond Haynes of the West Indies, and New Zealand’s Martin Crowe, all renowned for their stroke play and quick scoring. Pujara’s first responsibility was to set the house in order before stepping out for fancy furniture and decorative lamps as it were.

Pujara belonged to one of the two strains of Indian batsmanship. There is the wristy magician, exemplified by Gundappa Vishwanath, Mohammed Azharuddin and V.V.S. Laxman, and the stout-hearted defensive rock in the line of Vijay Merchant, Sunil Gavaskar and Rahul Dravid. He lacked the grace of the former and the technical finesse of the latter, but his heart was as big as that of anybody who played for India.

During his 103-Test career, he was the obvious answer to the question often asked: Whom would you like to bat for your life?

Published – August 27, 2025 12:30 am IST



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