Saransh Jain keeps 'India logo on my jersey' dream going with another statement display
He has been one of the star performers in the domestic circuit in the recent past, and has done his bit to put Central Zone in pole position to win the Duleep Trophy title
Ashish Pant
15-Sep-2025 • 2 hrs ago
Saransh Jain has been the difference in bowling attacks for whichever team he has played for in recent times • PTI
In the last 12 months, no offspinner has more wickets in first-class cricket in India than Saransh Jain's 44. Add to that his 311 runs, and he is one of just four players with the double of 300-plus runs and 40-plus wickets in the last one year. In a country with an abundance of left-arm orthodox spinners, Jain falls in the rare category of an offspin-bowling allrounder. And often, he's been the difference in bowling attacks for whichever team he has played for.
Think back to the Irani Trophy last year when, playing for Rest of India, he picked up 6 for 121 in Mumbai's second innings, which included the wickets of Prithvi Shaw, Shreyas Iyer and Sarfaraz Khan.
Or in the 2025-26 Duleep Trophy semi-final, where he beat Ruturaj Gaikwad in flight and had him stumped on 184, finishing with eight wickets for the match.
In the final as well, Jain's flight and dip, coupled with his high-arm action, troubled the South Zone batters in the first innings as he returned 5 for 49. And then, in the second innings, he added three more to his tally to make it 16 wickets for the tournament, taking Central Zone to the doorstep of a first Duleep Trophy title in 11 years.
"I am pleased that I have given a good performance in both these matches because it is very important," Jain, now 32, told ESPNcricinfo after the fourth day's play in the final. "The season starts with the Duleep Trophy, so the momentum that you get here carries through the season.
"If you remember, I also had a good performance in the Irani tournament last year. See, the thing is, if you want to get highlighted, you need to give back-to-back performances. Only then will the national selectors look at you and select you."
A key feature of Jain's bowling is adapting to different situations. In the semi-final on the black-soil surface of Ground B of the Centre of Excellence in Bengaluru, he varied his pace and got the ball to skid, apart from deceiving the batters in the air.
On the opening day of the final, on realising he was extracting extra bounce, he gave the ball a lot more air, getting it to grip and jump. Then, on the fourth day, when Ankit Sharma and C Andre Siddarth were involved in a 192-run seventh-wicket stand, he was prepared to take a step back and play the containing role, waiting for the batters to make a mistake.
"When I bat, I compare myself with Rajat [Patidar] and other good batsmen. In bowling, I know what I have to do. But in batting, I try and see how these top-order batters go about their innings and I play accordingly"Saransh Jain
"I have been playing cricket for a long time, so I have faced such situations," Jain said of his fourth-day tactics. "We were not panicking. This happens in cricket. We can't always have all five days going our way. One session, one-odd day, can belong to the opposition as well.
"We were fine with them having a few sessions going their way. It is not that tough a wicket where the runs wouldn't get scored. Our main aim was to not leak too many runs. We just wanted to take the game as deep as possible as we were already on top."
A major reason behind Central Zone's dominance in the final has been the partnership between Jain and Kumar Kartikeya, the duo - who have played for Madhya Pradesh together for a long time - picking up 16 of the 20 South Zone wickets to fall.
"We have a clear mindset," Jain said. "If he bowls well, I support him. And vice-versa. And if he is having an off day, or I am having an off day, we tell each other where we are going wrong. We give each other a lot of input.
"Like Rajat [Patidar] and Shubham [Sharma] are my batting partners, Kartikeya is my bowling partner, and has been for a long time."
Saransh Jain punches the ball away during his half-century in the Duleep Trophy final•PTI
While bowling is Jain's stronger suit, he takes a lot of pride in his batting. He said he talked a lot with his Madhya Pradesh team-mates Patidar and Shubham on how to improve his skills and trained a lot. In the last 12 months, Jain has scored three first-class fifties, including back-to-back half-centuries in the Duleep Trophy semi-final and final.
"I have liked batting since childhood. If you want to play cricket as a spinner, you can't just be a bowler. You have to be a proper batter," Jain said. "I have opened the batting, played at No. 3 in the Ranji Trophy, in a semi-final [against Bengal in 2022-23], and have scored runs.
"When I bat, I compare myself with Rajat and other good batsmen. In bowling, I know what I have to do. But in batting, I try and see how these top-order batters go about their innings and I play accordingly."
Jain had won the Lala Amarnath Award for the best allrounder in the Ranji Trophy after the 2022-23 season. With the next Ranji season a month away, it's a feat he said he wanted to repeat in his quest for the bigger goal, which is "to see the India logo on my jersey".
Ashish Pant is a sub-editor with ESPNcricinfo