Partnership:Sam Konstas receives his NSW cap before his Shield debut last year.Credit:Getty Images
While his former Test opening partner Chris Rogershas encouraged selectors to hasten slowly,there was near missionary zeal about the way Watson spoke of Konstas and the fact he has been refining the mental side of his game since the age of 16 – a process championed by the forward-thinking Greg Chappell but something Watson and others never contemplated until well into their careers.
“It takes a few years to be able to troubleshoot and navigate around your bad habits,old habits and default negative thoughts,just to be able to know what the right thoughts are for you to be at your best,” Watson told this masthead about mental skills work that has spun off a book and now a courseavailable through his personal website.
Sam Konstas clobbers a ball through the on-side.Credit:Getty Images
“That’s why all the work he’s done has been working through being able to create this bulletproof cocoon around him,so all he has to do is repeat what he has to do,ball after ball.
“The mental skill of this is how we bring the best version of ourselves to the fore and most importantly when the pressure is right on,when the scrutiny is on,that’s where these skills come to the fore.
“He might get exposed,like all batsmen get exposed at Test level. If you are slightly off your game,the calibre of the Indian bowlers expose you for sure,but that’s anyone,from Marnus to Usman to Sam. India are world-class and over a five-Test series they will ask questions every ball. But I believe this is the perfect opportunity.”
Watson pointed to the fact that Konstas was dismissed by Scott Boland but then absorbed him far more successfully in the second innings of last week's Sheffield Shield game at the MCG as evidence of his capacity to learn and adapt quickly within games.