India, don't hide. It's never worked: Australia great urges Gambhir, Kohli, and all to step up and face the challenge

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Former Australia cricketer Ian Healy issued a cautionary message to the Indian team ahead of the Border-Gavaskar Test series opener in Perth next week. Reports have surfaced about the Indian team conducting a closed-door training session in the city, leading to concerns about the lack of media access. Healy emphasized the importance of maintaining a balance between privacy and team spirit during training sessions, warning that excessive secrecy could negatively impact the team environment.

According to a report in The West Australia, the WACA, where the Indian team are stationed ahead of the first match in Perth, at the Optus Stadium, was in total lockdown since the visitors took over the old Test venue on Tuesday in preparations for the series. The entire practice zone was covered in black traps to deny any public viewing as reporters sent drones to garb images of India's training session. Even staff members of the venue were barred from using their phones outside offices and filming inside the ground.

Amid the reports implying a rather secret training session in Perth, Healy, speaking to SENQ Breakfast said that India are doing what Australia used to do years back during their overseas tours, and having learnt from that experience, he urged the visitors to open to the public and the media and embrace the whole package of touring a country for a series.

“India is now doing in Australia what Australia used to do in India, Pakistan and sometimes Sri Lanka – just not embracing the whole experience and the early media,” Healy said.

“If you sort of open yourself to media opportunities and do them and meet the Australian public and the many Indians that are out here – it goes a long way to a much happier tour. There are extra reasons why India locked themselves away, we just cannot imagine the clambering throng that they have to cope with day in, day out.

"So maybe training is their safe space, and they've got to get a fair few things done and they want to do it away from the prying eyes. With social media, cricket in India is 1000 times more serious than in Australia," he said.

'India, be careful'

Despite the reports in Australian media, BCCI categorically denied any secrecy in their training session. In fact, The West, on Thursday reported that the Indian board had allowed them to watch the training session on Wednesday as ample clips on social media emerged. It has also been reported that India will allow journalists to view India's three-day intra-squad match starting Friday at the WACA.

Healy urged India, who head into the series following a 0-3 whitewash at home against New Zealand, to relax and involve themselves in early interactions with fans and the media.

"It's never worked. The squad just doesn't relax when you do this, when you lock yourself away the media start turning the screws and the squad just can't relax. England did it when they opened themselves up, and the next one when they didn't, and it was an incredible difference in performance. You need to relax your squad and do some early media, then things seem to flow a lot easier in Australia. So, India, just be careful," Healy said.

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