Young India batsman Shubman Gill said on Wednesday that making his Test debut in Australia felt like “going into a war,” reported PTI. He added that he came back with an important lesson to  never “rule someone out of a scenario.”

The 21-year-old made his debut in the second Test in Melbourne from where India’s turnaround started after the thrashing in the Adelaide Test. Gill looked impressive throughout the rest of the series, with a total of  259 runs that includes a knock of 91 and a half-century. India won the series 2-1. 

Gill told the Kolkata Knight Riders’ official website, “As long as the fielding lasted, I was pretty normal. But when we finally batted, and I was taking a walk down from the dressing room to the pitch with the crowd cheering (backing the Aussies, nevertheless), it was an experience of a kind! It felt like going into a war!”

According to Gill, he was swept by emotions as head coach Ravi Shastri presented him with his Test cap ahead of the match.

“It’s inexplicable. At times you go through a sea of emotions which just make you go numb. It was that kind of a moment. Ravi Shastri gave a speech in the huddle and then I received the cap from him. After that we won the toss and elected to field first,” he recalled.

Gill is yet to make a noteworthy contribution in the ongoing series against England but the youngster showed why he is touted as the next best thing in Indian cricket with his solid performances in Australia.

Asked what it meant to debut in Australia, Gill said it was like a childhood dream coming true and felt surreal.

“When I was a kid, I used to get up at 4.30-5am to watch Test matches in Australia. Now people are getting up early to watch me play, that’s quite a feeling. I still remember my father used to wake up early and so would I just to watch the Australia series,” he remembered.

“It was a different kind of fun to watch Brett Lee bowl or Sachin sir (Tendulkar) bat. All of a sudden, I was playing in that team and Australians were bowling at me.

“It felt surreal that the world was watching me. I was really looking forward to the challenge and always wanted to play in Australia to experience how it feels,” he said.

And what are the lessons he brought back home? “…no matter what, you can’t rule someone out of a scenario. We had so many injuries but the dressing room positivity never changed.

“We got all out for 36 and despite that not for once our players or our coach or our captain and even the support staff felt bogged down or intimidated to such an extent that we didn’t know what to do next,” he said.

“As I had said before, if they want to play chin music, we have got all the dance moves ready!”