Business Standard

Secret of Shubman Gill's fearlessness lies in Karsan Ghavri's gesture

Well over a decade back when Karsan Ghavri took charge of the BCCI pace bowlers academy at the PCA Stadium in Mohali, he struggled to find young batsmen for his trainee bowlers to practice against

India vs Australia 4th Test, Shubman Gill, Pujara

Shubman Gill and Cheteshwar Pujara put up 114-run stand for second wicket to keep India afloat in 4th Test at Brisbane. Photo: @BCCI

IANS New Delhi

Well over a decade back when former India pace bowler Karsan Ghavri took charge of the BCCI pace bowlers academy at the PCA Stadium in Mohali to groom future India fast bowlers, he struggled to find young batsmen for his trainee bowlers to practice against.

 

"For the first four-five days, I would do drills, train them but there were no batsmen for bowlers to bowl at in the nets. We used to teach them the bowling drills but for actual practice, we needed batsmen. I was tasked to produce future pacers of the country. Without them bowling at batsmen, it was impossible. I got in touch with Punjab Cricket Association (PCA) to provide some local U-16, U-19 batsmen," Ghavri told IANS.

 

"Then one day it rained, forcing me and assistant coach Yoginder Puri to take a break from training. I walked across the road to this huge ground (which hosts PCA's district games) and saw some kids playing. There was this kid of 10 or 11 who was playing great, correct and straight shots. I walked up to a gentleman sitting outside the boundary and chatted him up. He was the father of that kid," he adds.

The kid was a young Shubman Gill, who on Tuesday, scored 91 to help India beat Australia in the fourth Test at the Gabba.

Ghavri asked Lakhwinder Singh Gill to send his young son Shubman to the nets and promised him facilities. The father, who had relocated over 300 kilometres to Mohali from his village in Punjab with the kid just to ensure that the lad could pursue his cricket, was overjoyed.

Gill, at 10-11, began facing U-19 pace bowlers who were on the cusp of representing their respective states. He would turn up every day, eat and face the pace bowlers.

"He started mixing with players, have food with them. We used to make him bat for 30-40 minutes everyday. We used to give every pace bowler a fresh, new ball. He was playing U-19 boys so well that I was surprised. I called Sushil Kapoor (the administrative manager of the academy and a high ranking official of PCA) and told him to take care of the boy and put him in U-14. He agreed. Gill was taken in U-14, played there and he started scoring," recalls the former left-arm pace bowler while talking to IANS.

Kapoor says the fearlessness was developed in Gill at a very young age by facing bowlers much older to him constantly.

"If you would have noticed, he plays the fast bowlers very straight. He is not afraid of playing pull or hook shots. Even today, he never shied away and played his shots against Pat Cummins & Co at the Gabba surface fearlessly. This courage has come from those early years of practice when he was facing bowlers seven-eight years older to him," Kapoor, who has also managed Punjab Ranji teams, told IANS.

Ghavri kept following Gill's progress even when he moved out of Mohali academy.

"Two years after he left the academy, Ghavri called me from Bengaluru and asked me to take care of Shubman. He said he is very talented and need to be groomed. I told him that we are playing him in U-14 and U-16. He was so enamoured with Shubman," recalled Kapoor.

"Shubman had this hunger for runs. I saw it from younger days. He would not get satisfied with 50-60 runs but would go for big runs," he added.

--IANS

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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Jan 19 2021 | 9:49 PM IST

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