[caption id="attachment_128258" align="alignleft" width="255"] India's Cheteshwar Pujara celebrates his double century. — Reuters[/caption] RANCHI, India — Cheteshwar Pujara has one more Test to play in the ongoing Australia series before the top-order stalwart slips out of India's sporting consciousness as the nation shifts its focus to the bedlam of white-ball cricket. Considered a ‹Test specialist', a euphemism for a limited-overs misfit, Pujara failed to land an Indian Premier League contract and will be twiddling his thumbs when the star-studded Twenty20 tournament kicks off next month. The 29-year-old is not in the 50-over mix either, having played the last of his five One-Day Internationals nearly three years ago, so will only be an interested observer in India's Champions Trophy campaign in England and Wales in June. But as India's marathon 13-Test home season draws to a close after the fourth and deciding match against Australia in Dharamsala later this week, captain Virat Kohli gave a ringing endorsement of Pujara's worth in the longest format. "Sometimes I feel really bad for him that people don't understand his importance in this team so much," Kohli said after the drawn third Test at the Jharkhand State Cricket Association Stadium on Monday. "You know what a valuable player he is for us. He is the most composed player we have in the team... Someone like that is priceless to have in the team." At No. 3, Pujara lends much-needed stability to an Indian lineup replete with stroke-makers and he played his role to perfection to anchor India's batting in Ranchi. Pujara batted more than 11 hours, forging a 199-run partnership with Wriddhiman Saha in the process, to put India into a position where they could target a win that was only denied them by an equally obstinate Australian unit. With his watertight defense and an extraordinary ability to play long innings, Pujara wore down the visiting bowlers to register his third double century in Test cricket. "This season he has been outstanding. He has contributed throughout. He's not being spoken about or being in the focus too much but I think he deserves much more than that," Kohli added. "He's been outstanding with the bat and I hope he can continue until the last Test match." The home season also saw the coming of age of Saha, who has firmly established himself as India's first choice wicketkeeper. The 32-year-old Bengal player lacks the muscle and charisma of Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who he replaced behind stumps in Tests, but he more than makes up for those deficiencies with his stomach for a fight. Saha brought up his third Test century in Ranchi, an innings of tremendous grit and character, to go with a sound performance behind the stumps in a keenly contested series that heads to the foot of the Himalayas tied at 1-1. "He bats wherever we ask him. He has no problems in batting after or before (Ravichandran) Ashwin," Kohli said. "He never says ‹no'. You really feel glad for a guy like him. He's willing to do anything for the team and put his best foot forward." Be brave and smile, ECB tell England players England's new Test captain Joe Root and One Day counterpart Eoin Morgan must provide crowd pleasing cricket and bear a sunny disposition so as to attract new players to the game, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) said Monday. The ECB is taking steps to significantly boost the number of players at grassroots level — which has stagnated over the past five years — and the England cricket team is seen as a useful weapon in that regard Tom Harrison, chief executive of the ECB, said the England cricketers and their director of cricket former England skipper Andrew Strauss knew what was expected of them. "Andrew Strauss and the England team are very clear that part of their responsibility is playing brave cricket — this commitment to playing an exciting formula of cricket every time they go on the park is linked to (the participation strategy). "Joe Root and Eoin Morgan understand their responsibility to play exciting cricket for future generations to connect with and for fans to get behind." Harrison, who has been in the post since January 2015 and installed Strauss at the expense of Paul Downton, said even if England were to lose if they went down fighting the reaction would be kinder. "It's a very deliberate strategy," said Harrison. "It doesn't work every time but we understand you're more likely to be forgiven for having a bad day if you've tried everything to win a game as opposed to trying not to lose it, which is a key difference. "Ever since Andrew took the job as director of cricket he saw the link between successful England teams, and I mean successful by approach as much as results, was key."