It is like the process you followed for your math exam. Prepare hard, solve a few problems, and try and find complex sums to be ready for the toughest exercise in the exam.
In Colombo, Shubman Gill has been that guy. India had two optional nets and one full session under lights in the days leading up to their Super Four game against Pakistan in the Asia Cup. Gill took part in every one of them – even the optional training on Thursday and Saturday – and batted long hours. After all, he will be keen to perform better than the last time he faced Pakistan, which was in the Asia Cup opener where he made 10 off 32.
Face left-arm throwdowns, work consciously on the forward stride, look at the footage, chat with the batting coach, and repeat. Gill had his nets routine pretty much set on each of the first two days. Last week was the first time he played against Pakistan in senior men’s cricket. Given India play them at least thrice – assuming the two teams make the Asia Cup final – in the next couple of months, he left no stone unturned to be ready.
So much has Gill faced Nuwan Seneviratne, India’s left-arm throwdown specialist, throughout the tournament, that it wouldn’t be a surprise if he had the Sri Lankan on speed dial. The indoor nets on Thursday was all about getting his footwork right against left-arm over-the-wicket angle and, importantly, not falling over while playing deliveries angled into him.
“[Seneviratne] has been with us for the past seven-eight years,” Gill said before training. “We have two right-arm throwdown side-arm specialists, and as a variation, we also have a left-arm side-arm specialist. It helps in various conditions.”
But on Saturday, it was a tad different. His training on the eve of the India-Pakistan match was about the hard lengths. It was perhaps the shortest batting stint he had had in the nets all Asia Cup.
Having survived the probing spells from Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah, Gill fell to first-change Haris Rauf in the last meeting against Pakistan. It was an in-between length that had him inside edge one onto the stumps.
He worked on picking lengths early and putting them away. He received a good mix of full and hard-length deliveries, and a few bumpers along the way. It was not the prettiest Gill nets to watch: he was beaten on both the edges, edged a few, and lost his off stump once. He had a short chat with Vikram Rathour and continued for about 15 minutes more.
“Shaheen swings the ball more. Naseem relies more on pace,” Gill said, aware of what he is up against on Sunday. “If he gets help from the surface, he hits good areas. Both are different bowlers and pose different challenges.
“Before getting to [international] level, every batter would have faced left-arm bowling at some stage. Whenever you play a new bowler it makes a difference, [more so] because we don’t play Pakistan as often as we do some other teams. Coming up against a quality bowling attack like Pakistan’s, [not having a left-arm bowling option] makes a difference.
“Sometimes there’s no technical flaw as such. Bowlers are also there to bowl, and you might get some good deliveries. You might get some unfortunate dismissals. When you are playing well there might be a few things going your way. You have to trust your game, back yourself and get those quick runs.”
The prep’s done, and Gill will hope it translates into runs as he faces a big test.