Rohit Sharma and Wife Ritika Sajdeh (Image Credit: Instagram) New Delhi: The former Indian Captain of the India test and the current Captain Odi Rohit Sharma, who recently left the cricket of the red ball at the age of 38, was seen in Milan because the Team India is fighting in England in the ongoing series of Anderson-Dendulkar. His successor, SHUBMAN GILL, got under fire after the Indian defeat of five goals in the opening series in the headingley-is’s first match as the captain of the test.Rohit, now focused exclusively on one -day international, shared views of vacation in Italy on social media, including a photo of the Duomo di Milano iconic cathedral. His next cricket task is scheduled for August, when India shows Bangladesh on the series of three ODI matches from August 17th.
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Meanwhile, India tolerated a frustrating loss in Headingley, where England was chasing a steep target of 371 runs in the fourth shift-jich, the second highest successful persecution in tests and the highest ever against India.
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Former Captain of England Nasser Hussain, speaking to Sky Sports, was critical of Gill’s captain’s debut.“I saw someone who found his way. He didn’t have the aura Rohit and Kohli. I thought the ball was watching a lot and was more reactive than proactive. When Rohit and Kohli Captains, you looked down and immediately knew who was in charge.England’s victory was anchored by Ben Ducketta 149 explosive, supported by the carefree 53 Joe Root and Jamie Smith’s 44 debutant not out.Despite India, he boasts five individual centuries in both shifts – with Shaubman Gill, Kl Rahul, Yashsvi Jaiswal and Rishabh Pant, who achieved triple characters – the team could not turn this dominance into victory.
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While he emphasized Gill’s leadership, Hussain also noted that the young captain was not just for the loss.“India has lost a match because of two things that Gill couldn’t control-reusty catches and bats of collapse,” he said, referring to the Indian Nedbal Field and a key middle order failure.India had England in vulnerable positions – 276/5 in the first shifts and 333/4 in the second – but could not earn. The essential collapse of the bats saw India, which lost 7 goals for 41 runs in their first shifts and 6 for 31 in the second, eventually swinging the match in England.
