Virat Kohli gave advice to Mukul Choudhary in a story that centered on a line now making the rounds: “Anyone can hit a six, but...”. The headline framed the exchange as a pointed piece of guidance from one of cricket’s most recognizable names.
The piece was published by The Times of India and carried the title “Anyone can hit a six, but...”: Virat Kohli gives priceless advice to Mukul Choudhary. That is the full weight of the reporting available here: a headline built around Kohli’s words and the fact that he was addressing Choudhary directly.
There is no further detail in the supplied text beyond the publication boilerplate from the TOI Sports Desk. That leaves the headline to do all the work, signaling that the value of the story lies in the advice itself, even though the body provided does not say what Mukul Choudhary asked, where the exchange happened, or how the advice was delivered.
That gap matters because it puts the focus on the one thing the record does make clear: Kohli’s comment was treated as the centerpiece, not as a passing line. In a sports ecosystem that often runs on quotes and quick reactions, the headline suggests the advice was meant to land with Choudhary as a lesson, not just a moment.
For readers, the unanswered question is simple and consequential: what exactly followed after “Anyone can hit a six, but...” and why was that the line The Times of India chose to lead with? The available text does not answer it, and that is what makes the headline the story here.

