As one of the three seasoned professionals in the side, Jaffer played a pivotal role in Vidarbha's maiden Ranji Trophy triumph -- astonishingly his ninth overall.
The years of experience he gained representing Mumbai benefitted Vidarbha greatly and he willingly played mentor to the young players besides scoring nearly 600 runs.
Though he concedes he doesn't have many years left in him, the former India opener says he will continue to play as long as fitness allows him. Jaffer has nearly 18,000 runs in first-class cricket.
But being the exemplary team-man, Jaffer doesn't forget to acknowledge the others behind the concerted effort that made for Vidarbha's fairytale campaign.
"Vidarbha had the talent but I think (coach) Chandrakant Pandit brought a lot of discipline, a lot of strictness, he brought the players out of their comfort zone - which was required I feel," says the veteran.
"These players have the talent but sometimes you need to push them; they don't know their limits. So with me around, (bowling coach) Subroto (Banerjee) around and Chandu around, you can see what they can do," he adds.
Into his 20th season in first-class cricket, Jaffer's hunger for playing the sport is as incredible as ever.
"I think just about playing, to be honest. I don't know anything other than playing cricket. I know I can do a bit of coaching and a bit of commentating, but it won't give me as much joy.
"There's always time to do a lot of these things. As long as I can play and I'm enjoying and helping these players with anything that I can, it gives me a lot of satisfaction," he explains.
Jaffer, who scored a triple century in only his second first-class game, is over 1,500 runs ahead of former Mumbai teammate Amol Muzumdar, who has the second-highest runs in the Ranji Trophy. Jaffer has 10738.
Asked if he lays any emphasis on statistics, he said they are important to some extent.
"...but you don't need to play for statistics obviously, you need to enjoy the game. You don't need to put too much pressure (on yourself) through statistics," he asserts.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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