
New Delhi: Indian Captain Shaubman Gill launched a new level during a hard 2-2 combat series in England. The elegant right-hander from Pandjab not only went with the bat, but also impressed his tactical discharge, led by a young team in the transition-on-board Rohit Sharma, Virt Kohli and Ravichandran Ashwin, who after a depth campaign for Gavascar Trophy.Gill entered the series under immense control because since his iconic 91 in Brisbane in 2021 he did not exceed 40 outside Asia. She often had to prove that Gill had to prove himself. Several technical improvements and quieter thinking helped him find the focus and discipline needed to cut his name into the historical books of the test cricket.
Inside the oval: an exclusive tour of the stadium where India played the last test
Test-By-Test Disabilities of the Historical Series SHUBMANA GILL:1st Test – Leeds (147 and 8):Gill’s first century outside Asia was a declaration of redemption. It was a reminder to his critics and perhaps for himself to ensure that he belongs to the highest level of test cricket. He became only the fourth Indian – after Vijay Hazare, Sunil Gavascar and Virat Kohli – in his debut shifts to win the century as a test captain. He also exceeded 2,000 test runs and repeated Kohli’s milestone in Adelaide (2014).2. Test – Edgbaston (269 and 161):If Leeds was a redemption, Edgbaston was domination. Gill scored majestic 269, attached 30 four and 3 six, followed by blisters 161 out of 162 balls in the second shift. His marathon efforts powered India to their first test victory in Birmingham-Record’s 336 runs. Happened:
- The sixth Indian recorded 250+.
- The first to do so outside Asia.
- The first captain with a double hundred against England in England.
- The holder of the highest Indian individual test score in England was overcome by Gavascar’s 221 (The Oval, 1979).
- The fourth Indian with a double century in tests and ODI.
- The first Asian captain to win a double ton in hay countries.
- The second highest match aggregate in test history (430), behind Graham Gooch (456).
- The second player after Allan Border registered 150+ scores in both shifts.
- The first player in the test history to score 250+ and 150+ in the same match.
- Indian captain with the highest match aggregate, which overcame Kohli 243+50 (Delhi, 2017).
- The second Kohl player to record for three centuries as a captain in the first two tests.
3. Test – Lord’s (16 and 6):The cult venue was seen by Gill Falter, but even in failure, he overtaken 602-Run Tally Rahula Dravid in 2002 and registered the most runs on the only England with an Indian tour.4th Test – Manchester (12 and 103):The bad start of the first shift followed a bold comeback. After India dropped to 0/2, Gill created an 188-run stand with Kl Rahul and scored the patient 103 out of 238 balls. His fourth century series tied him with Sunil Gavascar and Don Bradman for most of the century by a captain in a single test series. Also happened:
- The first to win four centuries in his debut series as a captain.
- The first Indian, who won Tendulkar (1990) from Sachin Tendulkar (1990) in Manchester.
- The holder of the most runs on the hay tour (774), overcame Kohli 692 (2014).
- Supreme Indian Run-Getter in the VS England test series, overtaking Yashasvi Jaiswal’s 712.
- The common highest runs of Indian in the history of the World Championship (level with Rohit Sharma).
5th test – oval (21 and 11):The promising beginning was shortened by the time, but Gill even ertied another record-Gavascar’s 732 to record the most Indian captain running in the test series.Final Tally:Gill has completed a series with 774 runs on average 75.40, including the four-century-greatest highest for India in one series after Gavascar’s 774 vs West Indies in 1971.
- Until the end of the tour, he also exceeded 6,000 runs in international cricket. Its updated career statistics:
- 6,000 international runs in 118 matches on average 46.15, with the 18th century and 25 fifties.
- In tests: 2,615 runs out of 37 tests (69 shifts) at 41.35, with 9 centuries and 7th years.