Gavaskar feels Gill needs to adapt to the needs and subtleties of red-ball cricket
“I believe he is playing a bit too strongly in Test cricket,” Gavaskar informed Star Sports. “There is a minor distinction when you play Test cricket when compared to T20I and ODI cricket. The distinction remains in the ball.
“The red ball moves a bit more than the white ball in the air and off the pitch. It bounces a bit more too. He ought to keep that in mind.”
Gill sustained back-to-back failures in Centurion in the very first Test versus South Africa. He was captured down leg when he aimed to look a broad shipment from Nandre Burger that raised up on a hot opening-day pitch in the very first innings, and got overturned by Marco Jansen when he attempted to play throughout the line in the 2nd. His ratings were 2 and 26, from No. 3.
That indicated he ended up 2023 with an under-30 average in Tests for the 3rd successive year.
While he has actually had abundant returns in the white-ball formats this year – 1584 ODI performs at approximately 63.36 and strike rate of 105.45, and 1202 T20 performs at a typical and strike rate of 44.51 and 154.30 – his Test numbers have not been too outstanding. His century versus Australia on a flat Ahmedabad pitch was the only time he crossed 30 in his 10 innings.
“Shubman Gill started his profession so well and we applauded his shots. We can just hope that he returns into his kind,” Gavaskar stated. “Hope he trains more difficult and succeeds in the future.”