Brisbane: Ravi Shastri claims to be anything but an emotional person.
As a 22-year-old captain of the India U-25 team back in 1984, he had stopped the team manager from telling rookie Mohammed Azharuddin about his grandfather's ill health to ensure that the player, who was on the verge of breaking into the Indian team did not leave a match and hamper his chances.
He is a 'khadoos' (resilient in Marathi) Mumbaikar who will hardly get mushy. But that was before Tuesday when he watched Rishabh Pant take a lap of honour with the national flag, hand it over to a proud Mohammed Siraj and then to Shardul Thakur.
"I got emotional. I am not someone who generally has tears in his eyes and even I got emotional," the India head coach, still trying to soak in what his wards had achieved, confessed to a quote-hungry media after his team of mostly greenhorns outfoxed Australia 2-1 in a Test series.
"I had tears because this is unreal. What these guys have pulled off will go down in history as one of the greatest series ever played. When you look at the COVID situation and state of injuries and then to show the stomach for a fight, after being bowled out for 36 is unimaginable," said the veteran of 80 Tests.
Known for his one-liners, Shastri was still gathering his thoughts after what unfolded here. A mammoth target of 328 was chased down without too much fuss by a fearless bunch of youngsters.
"This is the toughest tour ever. Nothing comes closer to this. This surpasses all," he said.
For all the vicious trolling he encounters and the flak he has faced for backing his team in adverse time, the 2020-21 series win in Australia belongs to Shastri as much as it belongs to Ajinkya Rahane.
Does he feel under-appreciated when players get all the credit? Finally, the in-your-face nonchalance came to fore as he spoke in Mumbaiya hindi.
"Coach Ka kaam hota hai ladko ko mentally prepare karna. Unka jo mindset hain usko clear karne ke liye. Jaachti (zyada in Hindi) complication ka zaroorat nahi aur game simple rakha toh kaafi kaam hota hai (A coach's job is to prepare the players mentally and work on their mindset. Don't over complicate things and it will work).
"Aur coach ka kya, woh toh dressing room mein baithta hain. Ladke bahar jaake ladte hain, koi statement ka zaroorat nahi, cricket baat karega. (What's it about a coach? He only sits in the dressing room and its the players who fight it out and its the cricket they play speaks for them)."
Very few know that it was Shastri, who decided that net bowler Washington Sundar will replace the injured Ravindra Jadeja in Brisbane. A truly inspired call in building a team in the most adverse circumstances.
"We were left with no choices. We had no one left in the squad when final Test started," Shastri admitted that the likes of Bumrah and Ashwin were in no condition to play.