Muscat Daily

For showman Gill, it's all about pushing the boundaries

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Ahmedabad, India - Showmen like the big stage. They are at their best when the arc lights are firmly on them. They embrace pressure and meet it with the sort of confidence that says, ' I'm ready'.

On Friday night, Shubman Gill had the stage, and was at his best.

When a thundersto­rm sent everyone scurrying for cover before the toss, Gill was pacing up and down the long stairway at the stadium. Perhaps it was the keenness to finish a job he couldn't quite in Chennai. Or maybe it was simply his way of warming up.

He exuded the confidence of a man at the peak of his game, ready with answers to anything Mumbai Indians were going to throw at him. When he walked off to a standing ovation after a 60-ball 129, you sensed another chapter had been written in Gill's T20 transforma­tion.

From an accumulato­r who tried to bat long to make up for middling starts, to someone who goes for quick runs without trying to bash every ball - such a game can't be without risks, but to have the belief that such risks are worth taking takes quite some doing.

Gill's batting is a train of simple batting mechanics; one frame segues into another. A stable base, still head, minimal and unexaggera­ted back lift, and nimble feet movement - quick but unhurried. It's all proper coaching manual. But beyond everything, more than anything, there's the calmness - he can send the ball where he wants.

This can only come with clarity, not just in his game but also in the way he trains.

When Rahul Dravid was India Under-19 coach, he had a theory about judging a player's maturity. One part of it was to gauge how quickly they could develop a routine, even if it was something as simple - or, perhaps, ridiculous - as not batting in the nets prior to a big game, instead of simply following a set of instructio­ns that players can get used to.

Last week, prior to the game against Royal Challenger­s Bangalore at M Chinnaswam­y Stadium, Gill exhibited a deep understand­ing of his own routines. He didn't bat for long in the nets, but the kind of work he put in within that time underlined this maturity Dravid has spoken of.

Gill batted for all of 15 minutes, not longer. The aim seemed to be to train specifical­ly on his set-up against the short ball when it's aimed at the body from wicked angles. It involved a quick trigger movement from middle to off, and the opening up of the leg side to try and use as much pace from the bowler as he could and pick them behind square. Not in front, mind you, but behind.

The one in front of square is a shot Gill plays as well as anyone. So this was mostly to try and work towards strengthen­ing another aspect of an already robust leg-side game. Twenty balls - same boring routine, of setting up, shuffling and manoeuvrin­g deliveries bowled into his ribcage at different speeds and angles - and he walked out with the satisfacti­on of knowing his preparatio­n was done.

The IPL is a beast, not least because of the travel and the stream of matches that come and go thick and fast, but because it can be difficult to get in quality training sessions within that whirl. It can leave you on a high when the runs are coming, but when they are not, it can be your biggest bugbear. Which is why Gill's training method and the sharp nature of it is intriguing.

Gill's batting is a train of simple batting mechanics; one frame segues into another. A stable base, still head, minimal and unexaggera­ted back lift, and nimble feet movement - quick but unhurried

 ?? ?? Shubman Gill
Shubman Gill

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