Lord’s, London – The hallowed turf of Lord’s braces itself for a spectacle unlike any other in recent memory. As India’s captain Shubman Gill strides to the crease in the third Test against England, he carries not just the hopes of a nation, but the weight of cricketing history. With a staggering 585 runs already amassed in just two Tests – including a monumental 269 and 161 in the Edgbaston victory – the 25-year-old prodigy stands on the precipice of achievements reserved for mythology: the breaking of Sir Donald Bradman’s near-century-old records.
Shubman Gill is in line to break Don Bradman's 88-year-old record 😳 pic.twitter.com/WSpqkbB672
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) July 9, 2025
The Records Under Siege
Bradman’s statistical dominion over Test cricket has long been considered untouchable. Yet, Gill’s explosive start to the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy has placed four legendary milestones within theoretical reach:

- Most Runs in a Series as Captain (Bradman: 810 runs, 1936-37 Ashes): Gill needs 225 runs in the remaining six innings. Given his current form – averaging 146.25 per Test – this appears eminently achievable. A modest 37.5 runs per inning would suffice 137.
- Most Runs in a Single Test Series (Bradman: 974 runs, 1930 Ashes): The Everest of batting records. Gill requires 390 runs across three Tests (six innings). This demands a Herculean average of 65 per inning. While daunting, his 585-run head start already surpasses Bradman’s own first-two-Test tally (394 runs) in that 1930 series 158.
- Fastest to 1000 Runs as Test Captain (Bradman: 11 innings): Gill sits at 585 runs in just 4 innings. Reaching 1000 runs within his first 10 innings as captain (requiring 415 runs) would shatter Bradman’s mark. This necessitates consistently massive scores but remains plausible 358.
- Most Centuries in a Series (Bradman’s best as captain: 4; Walcott’s overall record: 5): With three tons already, Gill needs one more century to equal Bradman’s captaincy feat and two to match Clyde Walcott’s all-time record. His conversion rate this series makes this a tangible target 1310.
Table: Shubman Gill vs. Don Bradman – The Record Chase
| Record | Current Holder (Score) | Gill’s Current Status | Runs/Tons Needed | Feasibility |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Runs in Series as Captain | Bradman (810) | 585 runs | 225 runs | High (37.5/inning) |
| Runs in Single Test Series | Bradman (974) | 585 runs | 390 runs | Moderate-High (65/inning) |
| Fastest 1000 Runs as Captain | Bradman (11 innings) | 585 runs in 4 innings | 415 runs in next 6 | Moderate (69.2/inning) |
| Centuries in a Series (Captain) | Bradman (4) | 3 centuries | 1 more century | High |
| Centuries in a Series (Overall) | Walcott (5) | 3 centuries | 2 more centuries | Moderate |
The Momentum: Why Gill Believes, and Why History Hopes
Gill’s form transcends mere statistics; it embodies a rare state of batting nirvana:
- Unprecedented Start: His 585 runs dwarf Bradman’s 394 after two Tests in the 1930 series where the Australian legend set his 974-run benchmark 18. This isn’t just good form; it’s a historical anomaly.
- Big-Inning Pedigree: Gill’s ability to convert starts into mammoth scores (269, 161 this series) provides the foundation for chasing massive aggregates. His double-century/century combo at Edgbaston was a global first 17.
- Captaincy Catalyst: Leadership has unleashed an even more focused Gill. He thrives on responsibility, evident in becoming the first Asian captain to score a Test double-century in SENA countries 15.
- Team Context: With India level 1-1 and the series poised, Gill must bat long for his team to win. Necessity and ambition align perfectly. Former captain Dilip Vengsarkar captured the sentiment: “I hope he does that… He is in great form, and he should do it” 15.
The Minefields: Obstacles on the Path to Immortality
Yet, the path to dethroning Bradman is fraught with challenges:
- The Dukes Ball Controversy: The Lord’s Test has already been marred by multiple ball changes, with players (including Gill) visibly frustrated. Dukes owner Dilip Jajodia acknowledged issues, citing unusually hot UK weather and “very powerful” modern bats causing premature softening and distortion. An unreliable ball makes consistent high-scoring inherently harder 9.
- Law of Averages & English Conditions: Maintaining a 146+ average across five Tests defies probability. English pitches, particularly at Lord’s and Old Trafford, offer more lateral movement than Edgbaston. James Anderson’s mastery and England’s aggressive “Bazball” tactics will test Gill’s technique relentlessly.
- Mental and Physical Fatigue: The sheer volume of runs required (390 for the 974 record) demands superhuman endurance. The pressure of expectation – knowing every inning is scrutinized for its record potential – is a psychological burden few have carried successfully.
- The Bradman Aura: The Don’s records are sacrosanct. The weight of history itself becomes an opponent. No one has ever scored 1000 runs in a 5-Test series, underlining the scale of the task 3.
The Verdict: A Tilt at Immortality
Can Shubman Gill break all Bradman’s records? Realistically, some are within reach, while others border on the superhuman.
- Likely: The captaincy run record (810) and matching Bradman’s 4 tons as skipper appear probable. Needing 225 runs and one century across six innings is challenging but aligns with his current trajectory.
- Possible but Difficult: Walcott’s 5 tons and the fastest 1000 as captain require sustained brilliance but are conceivable given his conversion rate and start.
- The Ultimate Challenge: Bradman’s 974 runs remains the pinnacle. Needing 390 runs, Gill must average 78 across the next five innings (assuming he bats six times). This would require at least two more colossal scores. History is against him, but his start makes this the most compelling challenge to Bradman’s supremacy in 95 years.
Table: Gill’s Pursuit of Indian Batting Records
| Indian Record | Current Holder (Score) | Gill Needs | Proximity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Most Runs in Series by Indian Captain | Gavaskar (732) | 148 runs | Very Close |
| Most Runs by Indian in Series in England | Dravid (602) | 18 runs | Extremely Close |
| Most Runs by Indian vs England in Any Series | Yashasvi Jaiswal (712) | 127 runs | Close |
| Most Runs by Indian Captain vs England | Virat Kohli (655) | 91 runs | Very Close |
Beyond the Numbers: A Legacy Redefined
Regardless of the final tally, Gill’s assault on these records has already reshaped his legacy. From a talented prospect navigating form slumps 6, he has exploded into a commanding leader and a potential all-time great. His success would resonate far beyond statistics:
- Symbol of New India: Gill embodies a fearless, aggressive, yet technically sound new generation of Indian cricketers dominating globally.
- Captaincy Credentials: Leading from the front while chasing history cements his authority and inspires his team.
- Bridge Across Eras: Even nearing Bradman’s numbers sparks conversations comparing eras, revitalizing appreciation for the game’s legends while celebrating its modern heroes.
As the Lord’s Test unfolds, every Shubman Gill inning will be more than a battle against England’s bowlers. It will be an assault on the seemingly impossible. The cricketing world holds its breath, witnessing a young prodigy dare to scale the summit reserved for its greatest deity. Whether he plants his flag at the peak or falls just short, Shubman Gill has already ensured this series will echo through the annals of cricket history. The Bradman records, once frozen in time, are now thrillingly, palpably, under fire.




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