
What looked like hand gestures has turned into a full-blown conversation about the future of coaching.
In a recent IPL match, Ashish Nehra, head coach of the Gujarat Titans, was spotted making animated hand gestures from the dugout. Cameras captured him signaling to bowlers—perhaps relaying instructions mid-game. While the moment passed quickly, the reactions haven’t.

For many fans, it raised a sharp question: are we witnessing a quiet coaching revolution in cricket?
What Does This Mean for the Average Cricket Fan?
For the common viewer, it’s a glimpse behind the curtain. Traditionally, cricket coaches are influential before and after matches—but rarely during them. But Ashish Nehra’s coaching style might be changing that. If his signals are more than just harmless gestures, they could mark a shift toward real-time, sideline coaching in cricket—similar to what we see in football.
And that makes you wonder—are we okay with this kind of on-field intervention?
Ashish Nehra trying to say umpire pagal hai🤣 pic.twitter.com/EcXBSaZ2Ab
— Pappu Plumber (@tappumessi) May 2, 2025
What Exactly Did Ashish Nehra Do?
Footage shows Nehra gesturing with his arms—one tap here, one swing there. Some suggest he was signaling field placements. Others speculate it could be bowling instructions or reminders of pre-game strategies.
Either way, it wasn’t random. It looked practiced. Intentional.
While Siraj and Prasidh Krishna (to whom Nehra was seemingly signaling) aren’t current Gujarat Titans players, past IPL seasons could offer context. Nehra has coached multiple bowlers across stints. Regardless, the gestures are real—and they’re raising eyebrows.
Make Ashish Nehra coach of Indian team pic.twitter.com/vapgaVWu3z
— Shah (@Iamshah0000) May 2, 2025
Are Signals Like These Common?
Not widely. Cricket doesn’t allow the kind of constant coach-player communication you see in sports like basketball or American football. The ICC doesn’t explicitly ban such gestures, but the gray area remains.
Can a coach influence live play from the boundary line?
Technically, yes.
Should they? That’s the real debate.
Strategic Genius or Overstepping?
Let’s be honest—Ashish Nehra has a sharp cricketing brain. His track record as Gujarat Titans’ coach speaks for itself. But critics argue that micromanaging from the sidelines could take away decision-making power from players.
That raises two dilemmas:
- Does this undermine the captain’s role?
- Is it really in the “spirit of the game”?
Much like sign-stealing scandals in baseball or headset controversies in football, it all comes down to perception—and rules that haven’t quite caught up with innovation.
A New Era of Coaching?
Whether it’s legal or not, one thing’s clear: this is a window into the future.
Expect more data. More signals. More mid-game tweaks.
As coaching evolves, here’s what might change:
- Real-time decisions: Analytics may guide every over.
- Player-coach chemistry: Quick, non-verbal communication will be key.
- Tactical transparency: Rival teams may even start decoding signals—like cryptographers in sports gear.
One day, a broadcaster might even say:
“And now, over to our Signal Analyst…”
So, Is Nehra a Rule-Breaker or a Trendsetter?
Maybe neither.
Maybe both.
But Ashish Nehra has always been a little ahead of the curve—both as a player and coach. His passion shows. His methods? Open to debate.
And that’s exactly what keeps cricket interesting.
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