After a successful tour of Australia, Pujara joined his Ranji side and played pivotal roles in both quarter-final and semi-final, with unbeaten knocks of 67 and 131 as Saurashtra successfully chased 372 and 279 against Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka respectively. Before going to Australia, he scored 56 against Chhattisgarh in the opening round of the tournament. While Sheldon Jackson has been the leading run-scorer for Saurashtra this season, Pujara’s influence has been more than just his runs.Penchant for big scoresBoth Jaffer and Pujara have a hunger for big hundreds. Out of the 40 times Jaffer has reached 100 in Ranji Trophy, he has converted 19 of those into a 150-plus score. On four of those occasions, he went past 250, and converted two of those into triple-hundreds. In fact, both his triple-hundreds – 314 not out in 1996-97 and 301 in 2008-09 – have come against Saurashtra.

Pujara boasts of similar numbers. Although he has 20 Ranji Trophy hundreds – half of Jaffer’s tally – 11 of those are in excess of 150, including four double and two triple-hundreds.Record in knockout gamesWhen it comes to knockouts, Pujara’s numbers are much better. In nine knockout games in the Ranji Trophy, Pujara has 1010 runs at an average of 84.17. In comparison, Jaffer has played 32 knockout games, scoring 2394 runs at 48.86 – almost at ten points lower than his Ranji average.

Jaffer, though, has the experience of playing as many as nine Ranji finals. And in each of those, he finished on the winning side. In those games, he scored 948 runs at 67.71. On the other hand, Pujara has been part of just one Ranji final so far, in 2015-16 when Mumbai beat Saurashtra by an innings and 21 runs. Pujara scored 4 and 27 in that match.

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