Opening Act: Under pressure India meet edgy Australia
A record third World Test Championship final entry that looked imminent before the start of the New Zealand series, now seems like a distant dream for India
PTI
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Australian captain Pat Cummins and Indian captain Jasprit Bumrah with Border-Gavaskar Trophy in Perth on Thursday. PHOTO: PTI
Perth, 21 Nov
The nostalgia of Brisbane 2021 refuses to fade but India, still reeling
from a bitter home debacle, will be under tremendous pressure when they face an
equally circumspect Australia in a battle of two out-of-form batting units in
the opening Test of the marquee Border-Gavaskar Trophy, starting here on
Friday.
In 2018-19 and 2020-21, India proved that lightning can strike twice
with back to back series wins but the manner in which New Zealand came, saw and
decimated them on home turf recently has certainly hit the psyche of an
otherwise world-class unit.
The undeniable truth is that some of the stars driving this unit are in
the twilight of their hallowed careers. How the five-match rubber against Pat
Cummins and his men unfolds could well decide their future.
A record third World Test Championship final entry that looked imminent
before the start of the New Zealand series, now seems like a distant dream. A
4-0 score-line has become an absolute necessity for India to avoid relying on
other teams. And a 4-0 scoreline on Australian soil is as improbable a
proposition as an Indian football team beating Brazil or Argentina in a FIFA
friendly.
But anyone who has seen this current bunch from close quarters will
vouch that this team can bounce back from the brink. It also tends to play its
best cricket when Doubting Thomases enjoy a condescending chuckle at their
expense.
In this backdrop, Australia, ready to avenge the humiliation suffered in
last five years, face a team that enters the cage without its regular skipper
(Rohit Sharma on paternity break), its best exponent of reverse swing (Mohammed
Shami, still not 100 per cent fit) and a future skipper (Shubman Gill, thumb
fracture).
An Australia series is known to make or break careers. Sachin Tendulkar
scored a hundred on a WACA track with 'snake cracks' and the world took notice
while Dilip Vengsarkar and Krishnamachari Srikkanth were forced to walk into
the sunset back in 1991-92.
Virat Kohli, Rohit, who will arrive before the second Test in Adelaide,
and senior off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin are facing that moment of reckoning
yet again and an indifferent result could have repercussions.
Kohli's coronation as 'King Kohli' happened in 2014 in this very country
with those four hundreds while Cheteshwar Pujara and Rishabh Pant still make
appearances in the nightmares of the Aussie bowling quartet, which will
certainly be playing its last Border-Gavaskar series together.
This will perhaps be the series which will be decided by bowlers more
than ever with Jasprit Bumrah, leading in the opening game, entrusted with the
duty of setting the tone against a line-up which has been far from its best even
at home in recent times. Mohammed Siraj and Akash Deep are likely to be
Bumrah's partners but the lanky Prasidh Krishna and the burly Harshit Rana are
also staking a claim with impressive skill sets.
Whatever be the composition, the home batters cannot afford to take it
lightly. Steve Smith's average in the current WTC cycle (2023-25) is just
around 36 while his career average is an impressive 56 plus in over 100 Tests. Marnus
Labuschagne's career average is nearly 50 but in the last two years, it has
nose-dived to less than 30. Travis Head has been India's nemesis in back to
back ICC finals within months of each other but even his average is a lowly 28
plus in this cycle.
Save for Usman Khawaja, who even at the business end of his career
epitomises consistency, keeper Alex Carey and skipper Cummins, who is now a
proper all-rounder, the batting hasn't exactly inspired confidence. Australia's
tail has a better chance of wagging given that India are mulling on playing the
better spinner in Ravichandran Ashwin instead of a far better batter in
Ravindra Jadeja.
It could be a tactical call looking at the moisture and bounce available
on a first track and the world knows that Ashwin is a shade better compared to
Jadeja when it comes to bowling on opening day tracks if need be.
To ensure that India's tail isn't as big as that of Kangaroos found in
Australian Outbacks, rookie all-rounder Nitish Reddy is expected to be thrown
at the deep end of the pool with hope and a prayer that he can be a steady
fourth pacer giving 12 to 15 overs per day.
In batting, three of India's top six batters have never played in
Australia and two of them have a cumulative Test experience of four games. But
there's something in Yashasvi Jaiswal, Devdutt Padikkal and Dhruv Jurel that
inspires confidence. They will have Rishabh Pant, perhaps one of the finest
Test batters India have produced in the last five years, and a mildly
under-confident but stylish KL Rahul for company.
If they fire in unison, India will be more than handful.
Teams
India: Jasprit Bumrah (C), Yashasvi Jaiswal, KL Rahul, Devdutt Padikkal,
Virat Kohli, Rishabh Pant (wk), Dhruv Jurel, Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran
Ashwin, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Mohammed Siraj, Akash Deep, Harshit Rana, Prasidh
Krishna, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Washington Sundar.
Australia: Pat Cummins (C), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Josh Hazlewood,
Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell
Marsh, Nathan McSweeney, Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc.
Match Starts: 7:50 am IST.
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