IND vs ENG: 'Neeche hi reh ... ' - Rishabh Pant's stump-mic warning to Shubman Gill goes viral during Leeds Test | Cricket News

IND vs ENG: ‘Neeche hi reh … ‘ – Rishabh Pant’s stump-mic warning to Shubman Gill goes viral during Leeds Test | Cricket News

Rishabh Pant and Shubman Gill (AP Photo) NEW DELHI: Team India dominated opening day of the first Test against England at Headingley, finishing at 359/3, with captain Shubman Gill scoring an unbeaten 127 and Rishabh Pant contributing 65 not out, while Yashasvi Jaiswal made 101 and KL Rahul added 42 on Friday. Jaiswal marked his first Test innings in England with a brilliant century, hitting 16 fours and a six in his 159-ball innings.Gill, batting at number four for the first time, demonstrated his attacking skills in his Test captaincy debut, remaining unbeaten on 127 from 175 deliveries.Pant reached a personal milestone by completing 3000 Test runs during his aggressive innings of 65 off 102 balls.During the closing stages of play, Pant was heard offering cautionary advice to Gill through the stump microphone when the captain stepped out to play a shot against spinner Shoaib Bashir.“Niche hi reh nikal raha hai toh. Ye aa jaata, uth gaya. (Keep it down if you’re stepping out. That one rose a bit, could’ve been caught.),” Pant said to Gill.The incident occurred when Gill stepped out of his crease to play a fuller delivery from Bashir towards short cover, prompting Pant to warn against taking unnecessary risks.The day marked the beginning of India’s new era in the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, with the team putting up a commanding performance through their three primary contributors. Dominant India on Day 1! Jaiswal & Gill Hit Centuries | ENG vs IND 1st Test – Sahil from Leeds Pant, known for his fearless batting style and risk-taking approach, showed a different side of his personality by advising caution to his captain.The partnership between Gill and Pant remained unbroken at stumps, with India in a strong position after using 85 overs in the day’s play.The trio of Jaiswal, Gill, and Pant ensured India maintained control throughout the opening day of the Test match.

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Yashasvi Jaiswal wanted match-like pressure in nets, India teammate reveals opener's promise before 1st Test vs England

Yashasvi Jaiswal wanted match-like pressure in nets, India teammate reveals opener’s promise before 1st Test vs England

India opener Yashasvi Jaiswal’s remarkable Test century at Headingley was one of the key talking points from the side’s dominant outing on the opening day of the Test. After scoring a superb 101 in challenging conditions against England, Jaiswal was joined by teammate Dhruv Jurel for a post-match chat that offered fans a candid peek into his preparation and mindset. India’s Yashasvi Jaiswal walks off the field after losing his wicket on day one of the first cricket test match between England and India(AP) The pair, long-time teammates, spoke on camera in a video shared by the BCCI, where Jurel highlighted the self-imposed pressure Jaiswal carried to perform in England, even before the official series began. “When we were playing for India A, you told me you just have to score runs in England no matter what,” Jurel recalled.  “Even when the ball was moving a lot, you wanted the same challenge in the nets. I think that stubbornness is what makes you different. I’ve seen it since we were kids. But tell everyone what you’re like off the field when there’s no match.” Jaiswal responded with a grin: “You tell them!” He added, “I don’t do much. When I need to be serious, I stay serious. I focus on my preparation and try to keep my mind calm. That really helps me.” The 23-year-old’s hundred at Leeds continued an extraordinary pattern; he has now scored centuries in his first Test in the West Indies, Australia, and England. On Friday, Jaiswal weathered difficult early spells, battled cramps in both hands, and still managed to hammer 16 boundaries and a six in his 159-ball effort. “Whenever I come here, I just want to give my best for my team and my country. I really enjoy practising alone and preparing myself. I try to make sure every ball I face in practice helps me when I’m in tough situations,” he said.  “You know this too, that there are so many moments when we’re under pressure.” Recalling a key moment from the India ‘A’ build-up, Jaiswal added: “Harshit Rana and Bumrah bhai were bowling really well. I wasn’t scoring runs easily but I kept playing. That gave me a lot of confidence and belief that I can survive and get through tough phases.” India 359/3 Alongside Jaiswal, Shubman Gill made an excellent start to his captaincy stint, remaining unbeaten on 127 at the end of the day’s play. Gill remained a composed figure throughout his stay at the crease on Day 1, and will be aiming to continue with the same intensity on Saturday. Rishabh Pant, too, showed his class as he walked back unbeaten on 65 at the end of day’s play, with India comfortably dominating the English bowlers.

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'No matter what, I wanted runs in England': Dhruv Jurel discloses Yashasvi Jaiswal's stubborn side; watch video | Cricket News

‘No matter what, I wanted runs in England’: Dhruv Jurel discloses Yashasvi Jaiswal’s stubborn side; watch video | Cricket News

India’s Yashasvi Jaiswal (AP Photo/Scott Heppell) After India’s record-breaking Day 1 at Headingley, the BCCI gave fans an inside look at the dressing room mindset with a candid chat between centurion Yashasvi Jaiswal and wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel. In the video, Dhruv warmly congratulates Jaiswal for scoring yet another hundred on foreign soil — this time in England, where so many visiting batters struggle. Dhruv says, “You played your first Test in the West Indies — scored a hundred. First Test in Australia — a hundred. Now first Test in England — a hundred, where batting is the toughest. What’s your mindset?” Smiling, Jaiswal shares that for him, it’s all about his will and desire to do well for the team and the country. He says, “Whenever I come here, I just want to give my best for my team and my country. I really enjoy practicing alone and preparing myself. I try to make sure every ball I face in practice helps me when I’m in tough situations. You know this too that there are so many moments when we’re under pressure.” WV Raman backs Shubman Gill to fire in England: ‘He needs the right support’ “I actually like that. For example, in the recent intra-squad game, Harshit Rana and Bumrah bhai were bowling really well, I wasn’t scoring runs easily but I kept playing. That gave me a lot of confidence and belief that I can survive and get through tough phases.”Quiz: Who’s that IPL player? Dhruv then adds a personal touch, “When we were playing for India A, you told me you just have to score runs in England no matter what. Even when the ball was moving a lot, you wanted the same challenge in the nets. I think that stubbornness is what makes you different. I’ve seen it since we were kids. But tell everyone what you’re like off the field when there’s no match.” Both laugh, and Jaiswal tries to dodge the question, saying, “You tell them!” But then he explains, “I don’t do much. When I need to be serious, I stay serious. I focus on my preparation and try to keep my mind calm. That really helps me.” This small, heartfelt conversation shows exactly what fans love about Jaiswal — simple, hardworking, and absolutely clear in his goals. His dedication to practice and love for pressure situations shine through, and it’s this mindset that’s helping him conquer every challenge, from the West Indies to Australia and now England.

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Rishabh Pant snaps at Shubman Gill's aggression, calls him out for taking aerial risk: 'Neeche reh ke nikal'

Rishabh Pant snaps at Shubman Gill’s aggression, calls him out for taking aerial risk: ‘Neeche reh ke nikal’

Rishabh Pant has built a reputation for living on the edge in Test cricket, whether through flamboyant strokeplay or constant stump-mic chatter. But on Friday at Headingley, in a surprise role reversal, it was Pant reining in someone else’s instincts. In the final session of Day 1 of the first Test between India and England, Pant turned advisor. As Shubman Gill eyed a late-day surge against England’s rookie spinner Shoaib Bashir, Pant, stationed at the non-striker’s end, issued a sharp warning. Rishabh Pant cautions Shubman Gill (L) after he steps out against Shoaib Bashir(X) Gill had just danced down the track and driven a fuller ball from Bashir straight to short cover. Instantly, Pant cautioned him, pointing out the danger in trying to hit too hard or too high. “Niche hi reh nikal raha hai toh. Ye aa jaata, uth gaya,” Pant told Gill. Roughly translated: “Keep it down if you’re stepping out. That one rose a bit, could’ve been caught.” Watch: For a player known for daring uppercuts and outrageous sixes in the dying overs, it was a striking shift in tone; Pant played the wise enforcer, urging India’s new captain not to throw away his hand. Interestingly, the roles flipped in the last over of the day. With Chris Woakes steaming in, Pant danced out and sent a length ball soaring over deep square leg for six, finishing the day on a rollicking 65*. Earlier, Shubman Gill marked his captaincy debut in style, stroking a composed, unbeaten 127 after a fluent century from Yashasvi Jaiswal (101). Together, they put on a 129-run stand that laid the foundation for India’s commanding 359/3 at stumps. Rishabh Pant then joined forces with Gill for an unbroken 138-run partnership, as England’s depleted bowling attack wilted. England captain Ben Stokes’ decision to bowl first backfired, with Shoaib Bashir and Brydon Carse unable to stem the flow. Woakes was expensive and wicketless, while Stokes picked up two but struggled to apply sustained pressure. The day, though, belonged to India’s young trio of Gill, Jaiswal and Pant. KL Rahul, too, played a helping hand earlier in the first session, scoring an important 42 as he helped stitch a 92-run stand for the opening wicket. India handed a debut to Sai Sudharsan, who failed to make a mark in his first innings, departing without troubling the scorers in four deliveries.

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KL Rahul folds hands, bows down to Rishabh Pant after India wicketkeeper's daredevil act vs England close to end of play

KL Rahul folds hands, bows down to Rishabh Pant after India wicketkeeper’s daredevil act vs England close to end of play

With the sunset casting shadows at Headingley, Rishabh Pant did what only Rishabh Pant can dare to do. It was the final over of Day 1 in the first Test at Headingley, a time when most batters would bunker down and play out the day. But not Pant. With India sitting pretty at 351/3, Pant danced down the track to a length delivery from Chris Woakes and dispatched it cleanly over deep square leg for six. KL Rahul bowed to Rishabh Pant in mock reverence following the end of first day’s play in Headingley Test(X/BCCI) Woakes stood there in stunned amusement. So did England captain Ben Stokes, who could only smile in disbelief. But the best reaction came moments later, and not from the field. As Pant climbed up the Headingley steps to return unbeaten on 65, KL Rahul, standing near the entrance of the dressing room, folded his hands and bowed towards the left-hander in a mock gesture of reverence. It was equal parts admiration and banter as Pant refused to curb his aggressive instincts, yet returned unbeaten at the end of the day. Watch:   The six wasn’t born out of recklessness, though. In his typical style, he picked the moment and struck clean. It capped a near-perfect day for India, who ended at 359/3 after being asked to bat first on a green top. Earlier in the day, Yashasvi Jaiswal and Shubman Gill laid the foundation for India’s dominance. Jaiswal became the first visiting batter to hit centuries in his maiden Tests in Australia and England, his fluent 101 showcasing strokeplay and maturity before he was eventually dismissed. Gill, in his first Test as captain, remained unbeaten on 127, a chanceless, composed knock that doubled as a statement of leadership. Pant’s arrival in the final session shifted the tempo. From resisting to releasing, he provided a burst of energy just when England hoped for containment. His 91-ball 65, featuring two sixes and seven fours, came with minimum fuss and maximum intent. Rahul himself played an important knock at the top of the order; while he couldn’t reach his half-century, he played a strong hand, scoring 42 off 78 deliveries to help stitch a 91-run partnership for the first wicket. The lone blot on an otherwise dominant day for India came in the form of Sai Sudharsan’s forgettable debut. Thrown into the deep end after KL Rahul’s dismissal, the left-hander looked tentative and was dismissed for a duck, seemingly undone more by nerves than skill. It was a harsh initiation to Test cricket, but with another innings to come, Sudharsan will be aiming to shake off the jitters and prove he belongs on the big stage.

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IND vs ENG: Shubman's coronation at Headingley - Gill steps into Virat Kohli's shoes with ton at No 4 | Cricket News

IND vs ENG: Shubman’s coronation at Headingley – Gill steps into Virat Kohli’s shoes with ton at No 4 | Cricket News

Shubman Gill (Getty Images) TimesofIndia.com in Leeds: There was a rare outburst of emotion when Shubman Gill’s cover-drive raced through the practice pitches and thudded over the boundary cushions. The helmet was off in a flash; a wild swing of the arm followed as India’s new Test skipper celebrated his hundred on his captaincy debut. It wasn’t an unusual sight, and it certainly was an unusual occasion, so much so that it nearly made the youngster skip his usual bow-down celebration.The hug with his deputy Rishabh Pant was probably the cue to pose for the photographers as the 25-year-old made a very strong statement by scoring a gorgeous hundred at the Headingley Cricket Ground. From the moment he came out to bat, there was a sense of urgency in his approach. That urgency could have cost him his wicket when he went for a tight single off his sixth ball but had the rub of the green on his side, and Ollie Pope missing the stumps gave him an early reprieve.A testing little period followed as England attacked the right-hander’s stumps and probed the corridor just outside the off-stump, but a tight approach and very little help from the surface meant he survived and then cashed in on the fuller length. The hosts kept searching for the glory ball when he walked out to bat, but even the change in length didn’t extract a lot of purchase from the surface and turned out to be easy pickings for the Indian skipper, who put on a masterclass. A gorgeous masterclass. ‘Wait until August to see what kind of style it’s going to be’: Shubman Gill ahead of Headingley Test The cover drives, straight drives, flicks, controlled pulls, and the trademark cuts in front of square were a treat to watch as he grew in confidence with every shot and looked much tighter as the innings progressed. After the initial urgency, there was a lot of calm in the way he approached the innings and put his head down to lay the foundation for a big one. First with Yashasvi Jaiswal and then with Rishabh Pant, Gill eased into his new No. 4 role and drove the side forward during a very crucial passage of play, as the match was very delicately poised when he came out to bat at the fall of debutant Sai Sudharsan’s wicket. The sun had suddenly disappeared, and another wicket could have put India on the mat even after a terrific opening stand between KL Rahul and Jaiswal. How Shubman Gill prepared for the first Test vs England in Leeds | Exclusive from Nets Gill ensured there was no serious damage and literally walked the pre-match talk where he asserted that he wants to be the best batter in the series. Still early days in what is a very long series, but the Day 1 knock could have easily won a beauty pageant for the most good-looking hundred. There is something about Gill when he is in full flow, as not only does he make shot-making look ridiculously easy, he manages to be a visual delight while doing that.For Gill, the batter, who has been repeatedly questioned for his outings away from home, the hundred in Leeds will give the youngster immense satisfaction and a lot of self-belief before Gill – the captain – takes over.

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India vs England: A new era begins with tons from Jaiswal and Gill

India vs England: A new era begins with tons from Jaiswal and Gill

Kolkata: Resolute hundreds from Yashasvi Jaiswal and captain Shubman Gill propelled India to a commanding 359/3 on Day 1 of the first Test against England at Headingley, Leeds. Yashasvi Jaiswal in action on Day 1 of Leeds Test. (Action Images via Reuters) Put to bat on a Yorkshire pitch that had an even covering of grass, Jaiswal and KL Rahul stitched a 91-run opening stand before England took two wickets in six balls on the stroke of lunch threatening to derail India. That prompted an even stronger response from the visitors, with Jaiswal adding 129 runs with Gill before being cleaned up by Ben Stokes in the 53rd over. Dug in by then, Gill shepherded the innings with impressive doggedness that was countered by an entertaining fifty from Rishabh Pant, as the captain and vice-captain added another 138 runs to pile more misery on England. More than just the numbers, this was a day that turned out to be better than what India were collectively hoping for after the retirement of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. The reaction has been stupendous. Jaiswal now has hundreds in his first Test in the West Indies, in India, Australia and England. Gill becomes only the fourth Indian after Vijay Hazare (1951), Sunil Gavaskar (1976) and Virat Kohli (2014) to score a hundred in his first innings as captain. An unprecedented dilemma over the No. 3 position yielded a slightly surprising debut of B Sai Sudharsan, a tryst that lasted just four balls, but that was not to undo any of the good work the rest of the batters did. India’s openers set the template, not only providing their side with a solid base to build upon, but establishing a model of patience and judiciousness that the following batters promised to emulate. Barring Pant of course, who charted his innings with a range of improvised strokes, skipping down to Ben Stokes and swatting the ball over his head, refusing to respect Shoaib Bashir’s off breaks, paddling and pulling but also showing the presence of mind to not go overboard all the time. Showstopping act was Jaiswal’s hundred though, a riveting display of off-side strokeplay with only nine of those 100 runs coming from the leg side. The only time Jaiswal looked a bit wobbly was when Brydon Carse struck him in the ribs by Brydon Carse. Before and after that, Jaiswal was happily dictating the flow of runs, cutting and driving with pomp. So spooked were England that they burned an lbw review on a Josh Tongue delivery from around the wicket that had pitched outside leg stump. Stunned into submission, England later couldn’t go for a leg-before review because Brydon Carse had overstepped while bowling a ball that to the naked eye felt like Jaiswal had got his bat down to first. Jaiswal took his time getting to fifty, but the acceleration thereafter was scary as his second 50 took just 48 balls. The way Jaiswal got to his hundred too was dramatic. On 91, with three balls left in Carse’s over, he cut him hard through point for a boundary before going through the covers for another four. Last ball of that over, Jaiswal rocked back to dab the ball and started celebrating his hundred while still completing the single. By then Gill had worked up a nice appetite for runs, scoring his fastest fifty—off just 56 balls—after a slightly anxious start where he almost ran himself out trying to get a tight single off what was only the sixth ball he had faced. That was possibly the only time Gill looked flustered. Otherwise, irrespective of partners, he was calmness personified, blocking away everything directed at his fourth stump and taking toll on everything that was slightly off that corridor of uncertainty. Along with Jaiswal, Gill nurdled singles and caressed boundaries, relentlessly pursuing a tactic of finding boundaries and taking singles so that the bowlers couldn’t settle on a line because of the left-right combination. Each run chipped away at England’s patience. Stokes looked so perturbed that he brought himself on. And while he did get Sudharsan by strangling him on the leg-side with a leg slip and a leg gully, Gill and Jaiswal proved to be difficult to dislodge. Jaiswal departed right after tea but not to be lost on the outcome of this Test is the immense value of the wicketless session he had manufactured with Gill before that. Gill assuming charge from there was like a foregone conclusion. The extra bit of caution was unmissable, as was the way his eyes lit up every time England bowled to his strengths. Be it cutting Woakes in front of square or getting inside the line and glancing Stokes for a sublime boundary, Gill’s intent echoed that of a man flourishing in his responsibility. The century came unhurried, Gill driving Tongue through covers to herald a new beginning for India. Gabba in 2021 had given us the first indication that the next generation of Indian batting was ready to take over. Headingley now becomes an exceptional and spectacular addition to a growing body of evidence that this generation may not be as extravagantly gifted as their predecessors but are willing to succeed by concentrating on the basics.

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IND vs ENG: From battling cramps to off-side masterclass - Yashasvi Jaiswal stamps authority at Headingley | Cricket News

IND vs ENG: From battling cramps to off-side masterclass – Yashasvi Jaiswal stamps authority at Headingley | Cricket News

Yashasvi Jaiswal (Getty Images) TimesofIndia.com in Leeds: A comfortable single to reach the three-figure mark, the arms went up and the helmet came off before the leap of faith. Punches in the air followed as Yashasvi Jaiswal celebrated the hundred in his maiden Test innings on English soil. There was relief, there was happiness and for those few moments, the pain disappeared as he celebrated with his captain Shubman Gill. Not long before reaching the milestone, the left-hander received multiple treatments on his right forearm, potentially because of cramps and looked in severe pain while navigating the 90s.Except it wasn’t ‘nervous’ 90s by any stretch. Physical ailments, visit by the physio was followed by twin boundaries and confident punch to bring up the ton.The forearm, however, was the only thing which slightly troubled him during his first taste of Test cricket in England as the hosts’ bowlers found it tough to keep the opener quiet on the opening day of the Leeds Test. The pitch was on the flatter side, the outfield was lightning quick and the left-hander played with a lot of application to first see off the new Duke, and then capitaised whenever width was on offer. How Shubman Gill prepared for the first Test vs England in Leeds | Exclusive from Nets Though, ‘capitalise’ isn’t probably the right word to use as he was lethal whenever the bowlers gave him room. The slashes and the cuts didn’t stop, and even Ben Stokes’ out-of-the-box field placements – leg-gully, two men in catching position for the cut/slash, a deep third and deep fine for the ramp – didn’t affect the way he operated.There was a lot of clarity and a similar dose of audacity in how he went about doing business on the opening day of the long summer. The scoring pattern validated his means and ways as 70 out of his 100 runs came in boundaries – 16 fours and a six. England’s desperation to try too many things in little time further helped his cause as there were a lot of boundary balls on offer, and Stokes’ fielding placements made the job easier. Off-side remained his dominant scoring area as only nine out of his first hundred runs were scored towards the leg-side. The hundred runs which made him only the first Indian, and fifth overall, to score a century in their first Tests in England and Australia. If the century in Perth was an announcement of his arrival away from home, the Headingley knock was a reminder of his class against an opposition he has enjoyed a lot of success against. When he gets in, he makes the opposition pay and his four hundreds – 161, 214*, 209 and 171 – in the format and more in the First-Class circuit have been big, and rarely has he thrown his wicket after getting his eye in.Even with the pain in the forearm and without the elbowguard – which he had to let go off when in the 90s – there was very little doubt this knock will not follow the Jaiswal template. The eye was set, pitch wasn’t doing any tricks and the opposition was clearly running short on ideas to keep the southpaw quiet. A moment of brilliance was the need of the hour and it was Stokes who took matters in his own hands. ‘Wait until August to see what kind of style it’s going to be’: Shubman Gill ahead of Headingley Test A 52.2 overs old delivery in his hand, the England captain, from around the wicket, used the angle and away movement off the pitch to his advantage and hit the top of off-stump to send the centurion back to the hut. Jaiswal dragged himself out of the park to a rapturous applause from the capacity crowd and was greeted by a warm hug from Rishabh Pant near the ropes before the wicketkeeper-batter went out to bat.On the opening day, Jaiswal stamped authority, class, and even with a troubled forearm, he managed to throw the right punches to keep the opposition in the far corner for the majority of the day.

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From 99 to 100! Yashasvi Jaiswal's century celebration leaves 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi starstruck - WATCH | Cricket News

From 99 to 100! Yashasvi Jaiswal’s century celebration leaves 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi starstruck – WATCH | Cricket News

Yashasvi Jaiswal (AFP Photo) NEW DELHI: India’s young batting star Yashasvi Jaiswal produced a fighting, memorable hundred in the first Test against England at Headingley, Leeds, on Friday. Battling intense hand cramps and visible discomfort, the 23-year-old showed remarkable grit and composure to reach his fifth century in Test cricket.Despite the physical struggle, Jaiswal stood tall against a lacklustre England bowling attack, dispatching deliveries with power and precision. His aggressive intent never waned as he punished anything loose with confidence, scoring freely across all parts of the ground.Jaiswal reached his hundred off 159 deliveries — an innings that featured 16 crisp boundaries and a towering six. It was a perfect mix of resilience and flair as he carried India forward with an authoritative knock.The emotional moment of his century was captured and shared online by 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi, a rising cricket talent who idolises Jaiswal. In the video, Jaiswal is seen on 99 before nudging a single off Brydon Carse to bring up his hundred. His celebration was full of passion — a loud roar, a leap in the air, helmet off, arms stretched, followed by a warm hug from Shubman Gill at the other end. Vaibhav Suryavanshi, 14, watches in awe as Yashasvi Jaiswal celebrates century With this knock, Jaiswal entered an elite list of Indian batters who have scored centuries in their maiden Test innings on English soil. The list includes:Murali Vijay’s 146 at Trent Bridge in 2014Vijay Manjrekar’s 133 at Headingley in 1952Sourav Ganguly’s iconic 131 at Lord’s in 1996Sandeep Patil’s unbeaten 129 at Old Trafford in 1982And now, Yashasvi Jaiswal’s unbeaten 100 at Headingley in 2025 Shubman’s Big Test Begins! India’s Probable XI & Stokes’ Mind Games | ENG vs IND 1st Test Preview Jaiswal’s superb innings eventually came to an end when England captain Ben Stokes produced a beauty. The delivery pitched on a good length around off stump, straightened slightly, and Jaiswal — playing across the line — missed it completely. His stumps were left shattered, bringing a spectacular innings to a close.As he walked back, the Headingley crowd and his teammates rose to applaud a knock full of courage, skill, and heart.

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Shubman Gill's princely walk gets King touches, joins Virat Kohli, Sunil Gavaskar to smash century on captaincy debut

Shubman Gill’s princely walk gets King touches, joins Virat Kohli, Sunil Gavaskar to smash century on captaincy debut

The pressure was immense. Batting at a position where Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli made their mark, Shubman Gill had his task cut out. However, the right-handed batter announced himself in style as the India Test captain notched up his first Test century in SENA countries in the first match of the five-game series against England in Headingley, Leeds, on Friday. Batting at No.4, Gill made his intentions clear from the get-go as he played his natural game and did not take any backward step.  Shubman Gill smashes his first overseas century. (AFP) Shubman Gill is the fifth Indian to smash a hundred on captaincy debut after Vijay Hazare (against England in Delhi in 1951), Sunil Gavaskar (against New Zealand in Auckland in 1976), Dilip Vengsarkar (against West Indies in Delhi in 1987) and Virat Kohli (against Australia in 2014).  Gill walked out to bat in the second session on Day 1, and he went after the bowling from ball No.1. He did not let the likes of Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue, Chris Woakes and Ben Stokes settle as he kept dispatching the loose deliveries for boundaries. The 25-year-old stitched together a partnership of 129 runs for the third wicket with Yashasvi Jaiswal. The latter brought up his fifth Test ton in the second session. However, he lost his wicket right at the beginning of the third session as his stumps were rattled by England captain Ben Stokes. Also Read: IND vs ENG LIVE Score: Shubman Gill announces himself as captain in style, smashes century Upon Jaiswal’s loss of wicket, Gill realised that he needed to take on the responsibility. The right-hander mixed caution with aggression in the third and final session, and eventually, he brought up his first century in the SENA countries off 140 balls of the bowling of Josh Tongue.  Also Read: Yashasvi Jaiswal starts ENG tour with sublime century, dressing room erupts As soon as Gill completed his century, the India captain celebrated in his trademark style. He bowed down towards the dressing room and took stock of the applause of the entire Headingley crowd.  Earlier on Day 1, former India wicketkeeper-batter Dinesh Karthik, who was on commentary, famously remarked, “There was a king in Test cricket, now there’s a prince.” Heading into the series against England, there was immense pressure on Gill as his overseas Test record left much to be desired. There were question marks on him being elevated to the captaincy role because of his lack of runs overseas. However, Gill let his bat do the talking and prove all the naysayers and critics wrong.  India dominate on Day 1  England captain Ben Stokes won the toss and asked India to bat first. However, he was made to regret his decision as the visitors made full use of favourable batting conditions. KL Rahul and Jaiswal put on 91 runs for the opening wicket. Shubman Gill then joined in as India piled on the misery on the hosts. Sai Sudharsan, making his debut for India, failed to leave a mark as he was strangled down the leg side, and as a result, he had to walk back for a duck. He was dismissed by England captain Stokes.   

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