Shubman Gill’s first outing as India’s ODI captain didn’t go as planned. Leading the side in Perth against a formidable Australian unit, Gill watched his top order crumble in a rain-affected contest that ended in a seven-wicket defeat.
With regular skipper Rohit Sharma rested and vice-captain KL Rahul stepping in as deputy, expectations were high for Gill to showcase leadership maturity. Instead, India posted a meager 136 for 9 in their truncated 26-over innings—setting the stage for an all-too-familiar collapse under pressure.
Gill now joins an exclusive—and unfortunate—club: he and Virat Kohli are the only Indian captains to lose their ODI captaincy debut at home and overseas respectively in completed matches since 2010.
While Kohli’s first ODI captaincy assignment in 2013 (against West Indies in Chennai) ended in a narrow loss due to a batting implosion, Gill’s debut in Perth mirrors that early stumble—only this time, on foreign soil and against the world’s No. 1 ODI side.
Rain reduced the game to 26 overs per side. India batted first but never found momentum. Openers fell cheaply, and despite a gritty 32 from Gill himself and 24 from KL Rahul, the innings lacked firepower. Extras (14) were the second-highest contributor to India’s total.
Australia’s chase, guided by Mitchell Marsh’s unbeaten 46 and Marnus Labuschagne’s calm 28*, was clinical. They reached the DLS-adjusted target of 131 in just 23.1 overs, losing only three wickets.
| Bowler | Overs | Runs | Wickets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mohammed Siraj | 5 | 34 | 2 |
| Kuldeep Yadav | 5 | 29 | 1 |
| Washington Sundar | 4 | 22 | 0 |
Post-match, Gill acknowledged the steep learning curve. “Captaincy is about handling pressure, making quick decisions, and learning from every ball,” he said in the press conference. “Today wasn’t our day, but we’ll bounce back.”
With two more ODIs in the series—both in India—Gill has a chance to reset. Analysts note that his calm demeanor and tactical awareness could still shine, especially with home advantage and familiar conditions.
Virat Kohli went on to become one of India’s most successful ODI captains despite that shaky start. Gill, now under similar early scrutiny, has a chance to follow that redemption arc—if he can stabilize both his team and his own leadership under fire.
For now, though, the record books show an unwelcome parallel—one that Indian fans hope doesn’t define his captaincy journey.
Times of India: Gill joins Kohli in unwanted captaincy record after defeat to Australia
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