Michael Vaughan has spent the winter commentating for Fox Sports in Australia covering the Australia-India series. He sat down with India coach Ravi Shastri at the MCG this week to talk Virat Kohli, the Ashes and why beating Australia in their own back yard feels better than winning the 1983 World Cup.

Michael Vaughan: Ravi you have done everything in cricket: player, commentator and coach. What are the differences between the three?

Ravi Shastri: They all have different skills but it boils down to one word: pressure. I actually think being a coach has more pressure because you have nothing within your control once players are on the field.

As a player you have the bat in your hand or the ball and you control your own destiny. Broadcasting is fun. Pressure? Nothing compared to being coach or player. It is great fun and if you enjoy broadcasting and the skills and challenge of keeping the viewer interested then it is great. I miss it when there are big games going on.

You played in the 1980s. What has changed now you are back in the game?

There is a massive difference. Pressure wise these guys have 20 times more than we ever had because the way media has exploded. You just had printed media in our time but it has rocketed now with news channels covering the sport like never before. We had one channel. Now there could be 50 and they all want their piece.