The teenager has experienced more of life’s ups and downs than many young men his age. His is certainly a rags to riches story fit for the silver screen.
“Believe in yourself — that’s key,” he tells CNN as he could be set to make his IPL debut. “Work hard. When you leave the cricket ground and go home and sit on your bed, you should feel you’ve learned something.”
After delays and venue changes due to Covid-19, the forthcoming IPL season — the richest club-based league in the world — commences on Saturday in the United Arab Emirates, with eight teams, each named after cities in India, competing.
Zubin Bharucha, director of cricket for the Royals, first spotted Jaiswal at the team trials about three years ago.
“He walked across the stumps and flicked it over fine leg for four, and all of us just stopped, stared and wondered. There was something really special here,” Bharucha tells CNN.
At the time, the inexperienced Jaiswal was not signed, but years later the franchise would come back for the left-handed batsman.
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Dreaming big
Jasiwal was three years old when he was first handed a cricket bat by his father, Bhupendra Jaiswal, an amateur cricketer who was keen to encourage his son’s passion for one of the country’s most popular sports. Growing up, his hero was Sachin Tendulkar and, like the great batsman, Jaiswal wanted to play for Mumbai and, of course, his country.
Aged eight, he left the family home with his father for Mumbai, commonly referred to as the city of dreams, and initially the pair stayed in a relative’s house.
“It’s really difficult to live in a small house with six to seven people. It was hard to live with them,” the young cricketer recalls.
As his father, an owner of a small paint shop in the village, didn’t have the means to support his son financially in the city, Jaiswal soon realized he would have to work, and play cricket, to survive.
He left his uncle’s home and moved into a dairy shop, working long hours there while also practicing cricket at a famous ground in South Mumbai — a hub for aspiring cricketers. But, just as he was becoming accustomed to his new routine, he was told to leave the shop.
“I asked for time till the next morning. I had nowhere to go,” says Jaiswal.
His coach provided the homeless Jaiswal with a place to stay for about three months before a tent at a cricket field with groundsmen became somewhere he would rest his head at night.
“I thought I had a great chance living near a cricket ground. I could practice more than anyone else,” Jaiswal says.
Finally, the tide turns
Unwilling to tell his family about his daily struggles in case they would ask him to return to the village, sleeping hungry became the new reality.
“I slowly realized it was really hard to live there. There was no electricity, no water, no food. You had to make your own food. At that time, my parents couldn’t afford much,” he explains.
To make ends meet, Jaiswal started selling food as a street vendor and did so for three years until the tide turned.
In December 2013, a then 12-year-old Jaiswal was practicing in the nets when he was spotted by cricket coach, Jwala Singh.
“He was batting well against senior fast bowlers. His story was unique,” Singh, who had also moved to Mumbai at a young age to pursue his cricketing dream, tells CNN.
A week later, Singh tested the boy’s skills at his own cricket academy and the rest is history.
Not only did Singh take the boy under his wing, but he also provided him with accommodation. Jaiswal still lives with Singh’s family.
Coincidentally, it was on the same day that Jaiswal’s father visited Mumbai to take him back to the village. Singh says the young cricketer’s big score, and an assurance from him, altered the father’s decision.
The moment of reckoning
Singh realized his student needed more than just routine practice on cricket grounds, so he would occasionally take Jaiswal to meet established cricketers, once meeting former Indian cricketer Wasim Jaffer.
“Jaffer told Yashasvi that making runs is a habit, playing longer innings is an art. That is what people will remember you for,” Singh says, pointing out that Jaffer’s insight is a key reason why Yashasvi has scored over 62 centuries to date.
Awards and praise followed. Jaiswal was selected for Mumbai’s under-16 squad and then India Under-19s.
And then came another moment of reckoning. The boy who came to Mumbai with nothing but a big dream was selected in India’s squad for the 2020 Under-19 World Cup.
Before he left for the much-anticipated series, the IPL auctions took place on December 19, 2019. Jaiswal was listed at a base price of $27,000 but was bought at 12 times the amount — a staggering $327,000 – by the 2008 IPL champion.
“It was pretty normal since I had a good domestic season. My parents and sister were very excited. It was a good moment,” he says of the price tag.
Jake Lush McCrum, the Royals’ chief operating officer, vividly remembers the first time he met Jaiswal: “I had been in India for a few months at that point and I was just taken aback to be honest … He had such a challenging start, but what he’s overcome is immense, and how humble he is.”
It’s rare for a cricketer of Jasiwal’s age to share a dressing room with cricket stars like England internationals, and Royals teammates, Jofra Archer, Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes
This village boy’s ultimate dream is to wear India’s senior team cricket jersey someday.
“I just want to play cricket as much as I can. I really love it,” he says.