The Dhruv Jurel story: Son of Kargil war veteran, mother pawned jewellery to buy cricket kit for him
As was expected Dhruv Jurel made his Test debut in the third Test against England in Rajkot on Thursday. With the team management not too impressed with the performance of wicketkeeper-batsman KS Bharat, the 23-year-old from Agra got the Test cap for the vital game of the series that is tied at 1-1.
Dhruv has impressed those who matter and when the team management and selection committee decided to drop Ishan Kishen, they picked the talented Uttar Pradesh wicketkeeper.
For father Nem Singh, a retired Havaldar in the Indian Army, it has been nothing but a dream ride over the last one year.
‘Dhruv played in the IPL, he played for India A, and now he has been picked for the Indian team. It is a dream for us. We don’t know how to thank people and God. The other day, I spoke to Dhruv and told him to be more grounded than before,’ he says.
There was a time when Nem wanted his son to crack the National Defence Academy (NDA) exam and serve the country as a soldier. Jurel Sr, a Kargil war veteran, wanted Dhruv to carry forward the legacy but the youngster was too enamoured by cricket to follow in his father’s footsteps. No one in the family has played cricket, and getting a stable job has been the big goal.
However, Dhruv had something else in mind. In his early days, his father got feedback from many that his son bats very well and should focus on it, but concerns about a future in the game remained.
‘No one from my family has played cricket. Everyone who saw him bat said, ‘ladka achha hai, aap ise cricket mein daalo’. But I’m a father and was worried about his future too. Cricket nahi hua toh kya hoga (what if he didn’t make it big in cricket)? Dhruv was not that good in studies either,’ his father recalled.
Nem met coach Parvendra Yadav, who ran the Springdale Academy in Agra, and requested him to make his son a good cricketer.