"If you ask any cricketer, the hardest form is Test cricket because there are no short-cuts. The shorter the game gets, it gets a lot easier. That is probably one thing.
"I won't say it's a concern because players get rewarded financially, but at the same time they need to find the balance. They need to keep the hunger to play Test cricket," Jaffer said here at a media conference organised by his employers, Indian Oil Corporation.
"A lot of youngsters are playing T20 cricket. The IPL obviously is kind of a short-cut route. When you play first class cricket, you play four days of hard cricket. Not many bowlers want to bowl 25 overs in a day or the batsmen probably don't have the temperament to bat the whole day or have the patience to bat the whole day. But in IPL, the shorter the game, the easier it is," he said.
"One of the things that struck me about Ajinkya, Pujara and even Rohit is the hunger to play, even when they were playing U-19 cricket or Ranji Trophy. Their aim was always to play for the Indian team. That is what I feel some of the youngsters miss now. I don't see that hunger in most of them," he said.