<p>London: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/yashasvi-jaiswal">Yashasvi Jaiswal</a> wanted to be more consistent on his first tour of England but drew immense satisfaction from his second-innings ton on a “spicy” pitch at The Oval to help set a massive 374-run target in the fifth Test.</p><p>Jaiswal ended the series with 411 runs at an average of 41.10 including two centuries and as many fifties.</p><p>In the initial phase, he was peppered with plenty of short balls into the rib cage, before Jaiswal had his fair share of struggle against Jofra Archer at Lord’s.</p>.Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy: Yashasvi Jaiswal hits 411 runs in the series, says 'want to make innings bigger'.<p>The Indian opener’s returns in 10 innings — scores of 101, 4, 87, 28, 13, 0, 58, 0, 2, 118 — suggest he was not among the most consistent batters but Jaiswal did leave a lasting impact after a decent run in Australia.</p><p>“I think I wanted to do more. I wanted to make my innings bigger than that. So, I could have achieved something else. But it's okay,” he told the media on Saturday.</p><p>“I was trying very hard for that and I was enjoying it. Whenever I go out there, I think, as long as I can bat, I enjoy batting as well,” added Jaiswal, who rode his luck to complete his sixth Test hundred on Saturday.</p><p>Jaiswal also got a word of advice from his former captain Rohit Sharma, who was watching the game from the stands at The Oval.</p><p>“He told me to hang in there and bat long,” said the southpaw.</p><p>Talking more about his learnings from the series, Jaiswal said: “It's all about how I fight. Always, the mentality is to go out there and fight it out and enjoy.”</p><p>“Because in the end, (and) as I tell myself that it's the game and we need to enjoy the game. That is very important. With that, we should have fun.</p><p>“I am proud of myself and all my teammates. We want fun. We want some battle in the middle. That is the fun. That's why you play Test cricket,” he said.</p>.India vs England | Oval Test and series poised for a keen finish .<p><strong>“The wicket was spicy”</strong></p><p>Jaiswal, who was dropped thrice in his innings, said England won’t have it easy on day four chasing a record 374-run target.</p><p>“The wicket was a little spicy. I was enjoying batting. I was enjoying it a lot,” he said.</p><p>“I expect that in England, when you play, you play on a wicket like this. Mentally, I was ready and I was just enjoying. I knew what shot I'm going to play on this surface,” said Jaiswal who shared a 107-run partnership with nightwatchman Akash Deep in the morning session.</p><p>“If we can bowl the channel line, it would be good. Batting won’t be easy here. We are confident of defending the target.”</p>.<p><strong>“We’re pretty chilled about chasing 374”</strong></p><p>England chased a record 378 against India at Edgbaston three years ago and more recently did not have much difficulty in chasing 371 in the series opener at Leeds.</p><p>Josh Tongue, who took a five-wicket haul in India’s second innings, said the batters would be going after the target despite losing Zak Crawley at stroke of stumps.</p><p>“We are pretty chilled, not overthinking about it. I don’t see why we can’t chase down these runs. How we play as a batting unit, it is very positive,” said Tongue adding that batting became easier on day three after the use of heavy roller.</p><p>“The first two days it did quite a bit from good length. Heavy roller made the difference. The odd ball still did something and jumped off length in the final session.”</p>
<p>London: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/yashasvi-jaiswal">Yashasvi Jaiswal</a> wanted to be more consistent on his first tour of England but drew immense satisfaction from his second-innings ton on a “spicy” pitch at The Oval to help set a massive 374-run target in the fifth Test.</p><p>Jaiswal ended the series with 411 runs at an average of 41.10 including two centuries and as many fifties.</p><p>In the initial phase, he was peppered with plenty of short balls into the rib cage, before Jaiswal had his fair share of struggle against Jofra Archer at Lord’s.</p>.Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy: Yashasvi Jaiswal hits 411 runs in the series, says 'want to make innings bigger'.<p>The Indian opener’s returns in 10 innings — scores of 101, 4, 87, 28, 13, 0, 58, 0, 2, 118 — suggest he was not among the most consistent batters but Jaiswal did leave a lasting impact after a decent run in Australia.</p><p>“I think I wanted to do more. I wanted to make my innings bigger than that. So, I could have achieved something else. But it's okay,” he told the media on Saturday.</p><p>“I was trying very hard for that and I was enjoying it. Whenever I go out there, I think, as long as I can bat, I enjoy batting as well,” added Jaiswal, who rode his luck to complete his sixth Test hundred on Saturday.</p><p>Jaiswal also got a word of advice from his former captain Rohit Sharma, who was watching the game from the stands at The Oval.</p><p>“He told me to hang in there and bat long,” said the southpaw.</p><p>Talking more about his learnings from the series, Jaiswal said: “It's all about how I fight. Always, the mentality is to go out there and fight it out and enjoy.”</p><p>“Because in the end, (and) as I tell myself that it's the game and we need to enjoy the game. That is very important. With that, we should have fun.</p><p>“I am proud of myself and all my teammates. We want fun. We want some battle in the middle. That is the fun. That's why you play Test cricket,” he said.</p>.India vs England | Oval Test and series poised for a keen finish .<p><strong>“The wicket was spicy”</strong></p><p>Jaiswal, who was dropped thrice in his innings, said England won’t have it easy on day four chasing a record 374-run target.</p><p>“The wicket was a little spicy. I was enjoying batting. I was enjoying it a lot,” he said.</p><p>“I expect that in England, when you play, you play on a wicket like this. Mentally, I was ready and I was just enjoying. I knew what shot I'm going to play on this surface,” said Jaiswal who shared a 107-run partnership with nightwatchman Akash Deep in the morning session.</p><p>“If we can bowl the channel line, it would be good. Batting won’t be easy here. We are confident of defending the target.”</p>.<p><strong>“We’re pretty chilled about chasing 374”</strong></p><p>England chased a record 378 against India at Edgbaston three years ago and more recently did not have much difficulty in chasing 371 in the series opener at Leeds.</p><p>Josh Tongue, who took a five-wicket haul in India’s second innings, said the batters would be going after the target despite losing Zak Crawley at stroke of stumps.</p><p>“We are pretty chilled, not overthinking about it. I don’t see why we can’t chase down these runs. How we play as a batting unit, it is very positive,” said Tongue adding that batting became easier on day three after the use of heavy roller.</p><p>“The first two days it did quite a bit from good length. Heavy roller made the difference. The odd ball still did something and jumped off length in the final session.”</p>