Lord's Test: Tempers Flare as Gill, Crawley Face Off; Here's What Happened!

With a couple of minutes left before the day's end, India players were all fired up, stepped on the ground, looking to make England's openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett face as many deliveries as they could.

By :  Bipin Dani
Update: 2025-07-13 05:36 GMT
India's captain Shubman Gill reacts during the third day of the third Test match between India and England, at the Lord's Cricket Ground, in London, Saturday, July 12, 2025. (PTI Photo/R Senthilkumar)

Day 3 at Lord’s was a canvas primed for a masterpiece, but what it got instead was a flash of drama. With India in control and the clock ticking toward stumps, they eyed a final flurry—two overs to push England deeper into trouble. Yet those two overs shrank to just one, thanks to what many perceived as blatant time-wasting by England opener Zak Crawley.

Crawley played Jasprit Bumrah’s over as if every delivery deserved its own prayer. He wandered between balls, sought mid-pitch chats, backed away repeatedly, and called for medical attention. The over dragged past six minutes, effectively robbing India of one more chance.
And then came the moment that cut through the English evening mist—Shubman Gill, the ever-composed Indian skipper, broke character. With sharp claps and fiery words, he made it abundantly clear: enough was enough.
Gill’s Response: A Captain Shows His Edge
Up until now, Gill's leadership had carried the grace and restraint often associated with MS Dhoni. But that evening at Lord’s, he looked more like Virat Kohli standing his ground in an Ashes-style stare-down.
Where Dhoni might’ve masked his irritation behind a tactical shuffle, Gill chose direct confrontation. His reaction was assertive, unapologetic, and unmistakably personal—not reckless, but deliberate. It showed that beneath his polished exterior lies a competitive intensity waiting to surface.
Gill didn’t copy Kohli’s vocal fervor, nor did he embrace Dhoni’s icy calm. Instead, he blended both: maintaining composure through most of the day, then flaring up when the game’s integrity was at stake.
The Making of a Hybrid Leader
This wasn’t just about a missed over. It was about principle. It was about sending a signal to opposition batters, and even to his own dressing room, that Gill’s India won’t be quiet pushovers.
He’s crafting a style that borrows Kohli’s passion and Dhoni’s strategic serenity, forging a leadership identity that’s reactive when required and reflective when necessary. That mix—rare and refreshing—is what may define Gill's captaincy journey.
At Lord’s, Shubman Gill didn’t just captain a team. He branded a moment. And cricket fans everywhere will remember it not just for the spat, but for the evolution it marked in India’s new leader.
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