Captain of his country, the best batsman in the world, tens of millions of social media followers and filthy rich – what is it like to be Virat Kohli?
Well barring some sort of Freaky Friday body swap development, we’re just going to have to try and imagine. But we can do that. We can do that easily. We can look at the facts and get a feel for things and then just fill in the gaps using best guesses. Rich or poor, famous or unknown, the nuts and bolts of people’s day-to-day lives are broadly the same. There are no great mysteries here.
These are the main things we need to think about when we’re imagining what it’s like to be Virat Kohli:
- His whereabouts
- His hair and clothes
- What he eats
- How he stays fit
- The emotions he feels
- His relationship
- What it’s like to be really good at batting
If we go through each of those categories, that should give us a pretty good idea what it’s like to be Virat Kohli.
Whereabouts
International cricketers are generally in one of two places: (1) a cricket ground, or (2) a hotel.
I think we can all imagine being in a cricket ground because we’ve all been in one. All you have to do is imagine that you’re in the dressing room or in the middle rather than in the stands, which is pretty easy. The middle is regularly broadcast to us in high definition, so we know what that’s like, while dressing rooms are just rooms with loads of cricket gear lying around. If you’re Virat Kohli, the cricket gear will all be fairly new and there won’t be any of those 1970s batting gloves with rubbery tines on the fingers that make them look like Stickle Bricks.
It’s pretty easy to imagine being in a hotel too and far more fun.
We are a huge hotel breakfast enthusiast. We stayed in a hotel in Bengaluru once where the buffet breakfast featured Indian breakfast food for those who preferred Indian breakfast, Western breakfast food for those who preferred Western breakfast and also – for reasons not entirely clear to us – steak in pepper sauce.
We are not a person who is breakfast loyal, so we absolutely ate all of those things for breakfast every single day. It was greatly enjoyable.
Spending half your life in hotels has considerable benefits where breakfast is concerned. Already we’re wondering whether we should maybe have investigated the Freaky Friday body swap idea a little more thoroughly.
Hair and clothes and that
One of the greatest changes in India in the last decade or so has been in the field of fashion. It used to be that an Indian version of a cool person was someone wearing a leather jacket and a pair of sunglasses on a motorbike.
Nowadays India’s ahead of the game. It’s all facial hair, tight T-shirts and ripped jeans and everyone looks impossibly well-groomed.
Virat Kohli is very much part of this. In 2014 he launched a fashion brand called Wrogn. (The early marketing slogans were all about whether or not you were doing things Wrogn – it was incredibly painful and bad.)
A large part of running Wrogn seems to involve making faces.
Here is some evidence.
Here is some more evidence.
And here is some more. (This one is absolutely our favourite.)
So that’s clothes covered. As far as hair and facial hair is concerned, that’s both easy and delightful to imagine.
Virat Kohli is lucky enough to live in India where getting a shave and a haircut is a highly wonderful experience and one that anyone with sufficient money would absolutely choose to have daily.
Let’s compare.
Getting a shave and haircut from a professional in the United Kingdom
The process involves telling the barber a number for the sides and back of your head, after which you say “and just a trim on top” or similar.
The barber then confirms the number (a ‘one’ for us because we have thick lustrous hair that is not entirely unlike carpet) and then he starts asking you what football team you support or where you’re going on holiday.
It’s an excruciating experience. They may rustle your hair a little to get the loose bits out afterwards, but that is as good as things get and you are no way adding a shave to the mix unless you’re fully mental. You pay the man and you leave.
Getting a shave and haircut in India
The actual cutting of the hair probably isn’t going to be all that dramatically different because the cutting of hair is a fairly functional thing. The fella might oil your hair afterwards though, which is very nice in hot weather because it makes you feel like you’ve got permanently cool wet hair.
The shave is on another level (and we say that based on shaves we’ve had in shacks where the electricity cuts out every five seconds – Virat Kohli will not be going to those places.)
The barber starts by gently applying about nine different oils and unguents, methodically working them all in. Then he does the soapy lather thing. Then it gets a bit scary because he’s probably using a cut-throat razor. But then it gets okay again because turns out he doesn’t want to kill you, he just wants to pull your skin around so that he can very carefully and accurately smoothen you.
Then he asks if you want a head massage and even if you say no, he basically gives you a face massage anyway. But you don’t say no, you say yes, and it’s extraordinary because of course you never normally have any kind of massage because you’re a man.
Summary: When it comes to fashion, being Virat Kohli involves (a) wearing T-shirts, (b) making three distinct facial expressions while modelling said T-shirts, and (c) sneaking in a daily massage by pretending it’s a shave.
Food
Virat changed his diet in 2012. He told The Telegraph: “I went home, came out of the shower one day and looked at myself in the mirror and said ‘you can’t look like this if you want to be a professional cricketer.’
“I was 11 or 12kgs heavier than I am now, I was really chubby. I changed everything from the next morning from what I eat to how I train. I was in the gym for an hour-and-a-half every day. Working really hard, off gluten, off wheat, no cold drinks, no desserts, nothing. It was tough.”
It sounds tough. If we do any training whatsoever, we immediately refuel with great slabs of wheat and gluten and gallons of cold drinks. Sometimes we consume these things even while the training is in process.
As you’d imagine, the new diet had an impact on Virat.
“For the first two months I felt I wanted to eat the bed sheet when I went to sleep because I was so hungry. I was craving taste. I was craving delicious food.”
It’s worth mentioning here that Virat is clearly not a man who knows his food. If we were craving taste and craving delicious food, what we would not want to eat is the bed sheet. We do not have to actually eat a bed sheet to know that bed sheets are not delicious.
Apparently the diet works though.
“I felt quick around the field. I would wake up in morning and feel like I had energy.”
We literally cannot imagine waking up in the morning feeling like we have energy. That is officially an imaginatory leap too far.
Fitness
“Around 30 minutes before the bus leaves for a match, he does what he calls a ‘priming session’ in the gym,” Chris Woakes told the Guardian’s Ali Martin recently. “It’s like a short burst of Olympic weightlifting.”
Just like Mark Wahlberg in Pain and Gain, Virat Kohli believes in fitness. He believes in it so much that he’s invested in a chain of gyms and fitness centres across India.
“From 2015 I changed my training again. I started lifting, snatching, cleaning and dead lifting. It was unbelievable. I saw the result. I remember running after a ball in a Test series in Sri Lanka and I felt more power in my legs. It was, like, ‘wow’. This training is addictive. The last year-and-a-half it has taken my game to another level.”
Here’s a shot of Virat Kohli lifting something heavy above his head, taken from this YouTube video. We have no clue why he’s wearing a hat.
We are very bad at this kind of lift for two reasons:
(1) We are very inflexible. Thanks to many years working at a computer, our arms don’t really go straight above our head any more. To get them in roughly the right position, we have to do a kind of arched back thing. This is a very sad thing, but it is also the truth. The remedy is to do loads of stretching. Stretching is exactly the kind of thing we always resolve to do more of and exactly the kind of thing we never do more of.
(2) We are very weak. (Our top half is anyway.)
Here’s a blurry shot from the same video, where Virat’s filming himself on a static bike.
If you are able to film yourself while cycling, you basically aren’t cycling. Cycling is supposed to end in a coughing fit and maybe some light vomiting.
We have no idea why he shot this footage and we’re actually kind of pissed off about it.
Emotions
Virat Kohli strikes us as being quite an emotional man. We aren’t – unless ‘hungry’ is an emotion (and we’ve already dealt with that one anyway).
Kohli seems to get angry about everything when he plays cricket. We can only conclude that he deliberately maintains a near-constant state of peevishness throughout every match, simply so that the final step to full-on rage isn’t too great.
This is alien to us. When we see him snarling with his eyes bulging out of his head at the moment he celebrates a hundred, we always think that it is (a) an entirely inappropriate emotional reaction and (b) a colossal waste of energy.
Being emotional seems thoroughly exhausting, but we suppose all that pent-up energy resulting from his new diet has to come out somehow.
If the Freaky Friday thing happened, the first thing we would do in Virat Kohli’s body is make an energy trade-off. We’d get right back on the wheat, right back on the gluten – maybe even right back on the cold drinks. Apparently we’d lose energy through doing this, but it’s okay, it’s ABSOLUTELY FINE, because we’d also make savings.
We’d cut back on screaming and cut back on snarling and we’re pretty sure that would allow us to break even.
Relationship
Virat Kohli is married to Bollywood actress Anushka Sharma.
We read that when it was Sharma’s birthday recently, they went to watch Avengers: Infinity War and then there was a photo of them from later that night where you can see a cake in the background.
This all seems very normal, so to imagine what Virat Kohli’s relationship is like, just imagine a completely normal relationship except that everyone stares at you 100 per cent of the time whenever you’re out in public.
Being incredibly good at batting
While this one is most likely the greatest point of difference between yourself and Virat Kohli, it’s also the easiest gap to close. Because who among us hasn’t already spent enormous chunks of our life daydreaming about being brilliant at batting?
Back when we were ten, we’d hit a sponge or tennis ball and imagine it had gone for six to bring up our hundred. Now that we’re 40, we have got this down so well that we can do the exact same thing without even needing the ball. We just do the whole thing in our head. We’re doing it now! Six!
Being brilliant at batting is exactly the same as being rubbish at batting only with far fewer mishits. You don’t even need to use your imagination much at all really. It’s actually easier to imagine being good at batting than to imagine being mediocre at batting because you don’t also need to imagine those occasional poor shots.
Do it. Just sit there, in your chair, on your fat arse, and imagine yourself middling a cover drive. Now imagine it again. And again.
Congratulations, you are Virat Kohli.
I know you don’t do requests but “What’s it like to be…” has the makings of a great series. Who’s next? My money’s on Ian Austin.
I’ve no idea what it’s like to be Virat Kolhi- my hair, beard, dietary and excercise choices would make that obvious. I did play cricket last night in a T20 however, and my colleagues were utterly unimpressed with my feats.
Below, thusly, is an extract from the match report (written by me, obviously).
After Mistry’s brilliant catch at the start, the choice wicket came when the batsmen tried to slog the ball back over the bowler’s head, out of Balliol College ground, and possibly out of Oxford itself. It sailed up in the air, hanging briefly in-front of the Sun, before plunging back to earth. Beneath it, Paton, whose career in the Bodleian had to this date totally prepared him for shelling this chance, was directly beneath the falling ball. He recalled the hours spent reading blog-posts on the matter and held in hands in the prescribed manner, relaxed, breathed out, and prepared to make an almighty cock-up of everything. Instead the ball stayed in his hands, surprising pretty much everyone in the grounds, not least the hapless fielder who bellowed his triumph to the heavens and the spectators (there were actual spectators, and not just a couple of Shaw’s disinterested children).
For context, the paragraph is longer than what was devoted to our best batsman’s fourth straight innings without being dismissed.
Is this the most-visited post on the site yet?
The Aussie ball tampering was VERY big news.
That’s this year. Can’t remember what was best ever. Probably something about a videogame. We do know that the piece about Mike Selvey leaving the Guardian is right up there though, which is kind of odd. Guess no-one else in the world saw fit to write about it.
That was me. I visited the Selvey site nine billion million times. Things were slow at work.
While I’m all for Kohli, hotel breakfasts, Indian massages and amusement, this was all a bit unexpected.
That’s really great post and I’m delighted to share with you all that I’m very big fan of virat and we all know he’s best cricketer in the world and that intensity of him to be on top and passion to win the game in any circumstances stands him out from other’s
I’m not sure if this is sincere or satire. These are all very strange times.
I reckon that final apostrophe is the giveaway, the work of a master at his craft.
Imagining being good at batting requires a lot more effort.
I imagine taking my guard, missing a straight one, stomping off and throwing my bat away. Now I have to imagine a load of run scoring shots too? Who’s got time for that?
Haircuts in America are much like the UK. Except that (at least in the funky trendy hipstery place I go to (despite being 40)), the barbers are all young ladies with tattoos and they instinctively know I don’t want to be talked to.
Getting my haircut in New Zealand sounds the same as the US and UK. The only difference that I can see is that I get my haircut by the mother of an international cricketer.
It is still an awkward 20 minutes of hostage chit chat.
I also married an Anushka.
Do you mind which international cricketer’s mother does your hair, or can it be anyone?
Hmm, it sounds like the main options for avoiding awkward conversation are (1) “move to America”, (2) “metamorphose into Virat Kohli” and (3) “learn to cut your own hair”. But which will have the better impact on my own marital prospects?
Option (2) is undoubtedly superior until one bears in mind that metamorphosis can go awry, so is actually rather high-risk. Option (1) invites the possibility of marrying any one of over 100 million American women, of whom a certain percentage are bound to be single and within a suitable age-band, but has the disadvantage of most likely marrying an American. That is not inherently a disadvantage, I suppose, but would such idiosyncrasies as proper spelling and proper pronunciation and proper sports be tolerated? Yet the less said about the marital eligibility of men who opt for (3), the better.
Tough call, think I might have to aim to go bald instead.
Imagining the whole fashion thing isn’t that easy. I was once asked by a Bollywood actress whether she should start her own fashion brand (apparently she thought about this because Deepika had her own brand). I thought long and hard, and considering that absolutely nothing in my life experience or knowledge had prepared me to answer, or even consider, this question, ended up looking like a dope.
Top hover captioning. I think this is your best yet.
“I was once asked by a Bollywood actress whether she should start her own fashion brand”
It really doesn’t matter how dopey you ended up looking, that’s still an anecdote for the ages – one that should see you dining out on it for a long time to come. Just not in the company of a Bollywood actress, sadly…
not as good as being neil wagner
I’m with Daneel on this. If you hit sixes and score hundreds in your daydreams, it suggests that pessimism and a sense of reality don’t leak into your imagination. They certainly do in mine. I would walk out to bat, at Lord’s, against Australia, needing a big innings to save the Ashes, and all I would be thinking about is how underprepared I am for such a responsibility. WHY HAS THIS HAPPENED TO ME? I would be thinking. I’m not an international cricketer, or even a professional cricketer. What was the selector thinking when he picked ME to play? I can’t do this. I don’t want to do this. I want to go home. Please can I go home?
You’ll be telling us next that your sexual fantasies aren’t wracked with guilt and shame, and that there’s more than just you there.
Forget Kohli – what’s it like to be Peter Chase?