In his first match as India’s Test captain, Shubman Gill faced a tough initiation as his team failed to defend a mammoth 371-run target against England at Headingley, Leeds.
Despite five Indian centuries and strong early control, England staged a remarkable comeback, chasing down the target and handing India a heartbreaking loss.
Known for their aggressive ‘Bazball’ approach, England once again proved their resilience by pulling off a chase that few teams dare to attempt in the fourth innings. For the second time in three years, they successfully hunted down a 370+ score against India, this time spoiling Gill’s captaincy debut.
The match saw India let key moments slip — especially with multiple dropped catches and back-to-back lower-order collapses. While India’s top-order showed fight, the tail couldn’t offer support when it mattered most. In contrast, England’s lower-order stepped up, snatching momentum at crucial times.
Speaking after the match, Gill acknowledged the team’s effort but didn’t shy away from pointing out the areas that cost them the game.
“A brilliant Test. We had our chances. Dropped catches and lower-order not contributing cost us,” Gill said. “We were thinking of giving them 430 yesterday, but lost the last few wickets cheaply. Even today, we started well — just didn’t go our way. These things happen, but we’ve got to fix them.”
Gill admitted the first innings collapse was damaging and emphasized that such mistakes need correction going forward.
“Chances don’t come easy on pitches like this. We’ve got a young, learning team. We need to improve. We bowled really well in the first session today — didn’t give away runs. But once the ball gets old, it’s tough to stop the scoring. We need to keep taking wickets when it gets soft.”
Gill’s honest and composed response under pressure highlighted his leadership potential — even in defeat.