India reach 233/6 at Stumps on Day 1 of 1st Test against Australia

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The Australia v India contest has been one of the most absorbing Test rivalries and the race for crucial ICC World Test Championship points will further enhance the stakes this time.

Overview

Australia v India, 1st Test
Adelaide Oval
Thursday, 17 Dec – Monday, 21 Dec, 02:30pm local time, 04:00am GMT

Virat Kohli's India created history when they toured Australia two years ago, claiming the four-match series 2-1 to register the country's first Test series victory Down Under. Not much has changed in terms of the visiting team's credentials this time around, but Australia look a lot more formidable, specifically in the batting department.

Steve Smith and David Warner's returns have certainly played a role in bolstering them, but equally instrumental to Australia's rise to No.1 in the MRF Tyres ICC Test Team Rankings has been the proliferation of other batsmen such as Marnus Labuschagne and Travis Head, both of whom have established themselves as fine Test players in the last two years. And so, the hosts appear a much more intimidating batting unit than the one that failed to register a single hundred against India in 2018/19, even in the absence of Warner for the opening Test.

The first Test at Adelaide also presents India the challenge of playing their first day/night Test on overseas soil. Their bowling attack, which bundled Australia A for 108 in a three-day warm-up match, is well-equipped for the task, but the moving pink ball will also ask questions of India's batsmen – in the same warm-up, Indians had been bowled out for 194 by a second-string attack. With the likes of Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon, the challenge will be further amplified.

The contest will acquire more importance in the backdrop of the ICC World Test Championship. Australia and India currently occupy the top two spots on the points table, but New Zealand, who just registered a clean sweep against West Indies, are threatening to dislodge India. Australia are on firmer footing, but their dominance on the table could be jeopardised if they slip up in this series.

Remember the last time

A full-strength India side registered their first series victory on Australian soil with wins in Adelaide and Melbourne in 2018/19. Cheteshwar Pujara was key to India's success with the bat, making 521 runs at 74.42, including three centuries. Jasprit Bumrah was the dominant force with the ball, claiming 21 wickets at 17.

What they said:

Tim Paine, Australia captain: "Steve Smith and David Warner are two of the best players in the world, they've played in lots of Test matches for Australia, lots of big matches, lots of big series, so their experience not only for me to lean on but for our whole group has been awesome, and the way they've been around our group for the last 12 months has been unbelievably good, so we're very lucky to have them back."

Ajinkya Rahane, India vice-captain: "We do have a strong attack. We will miss Ishant Sharma, he is a senior fast bowler. But the guys who are here – Umesh Yadav, Navdeep Saini, Mohammad Siraj with Jasprit and Shami – are all experienced and they know how to bowl in these conditions."
 
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India captain Virat Kohli has promised "high voltage" action in the four-Test series against Australia, which gets under way in Adelaide on Thursday.

The hosts are looking to avenge a 2-1 defeat on home soil two years ago, when they were missing Steve Smith and David Warner after the ball-tampering affair.

Both sides are without some key players because of injury.

Before the day-night Test, Kohli said: "It is definitely going to be as competitive as it has always been."

Warner misses the first Test with an adductor injury, while India are awaiting the arrival of batsman Rohit Sharma. Fast bowler Ishant Sharma has been ruled out of the whole tour.

India's win two years ago, their first series success in Australia, was occasionally a bad-tempered contest.

"It's going to be high-voltage cricket because we have quality players on both sides and they are all hungry and eager to perform," added Kohli, who will only play in the first Test before returning home for the birth of his first child.

"There's going to be tension, there's going to be stress, there's going to be emotions flaring every now and then, but I don't foresee anything getting personal anymore."

Australia are currently top of the International Cricket Council Test Championship, with India second. Both sides can make big progress towards securing their place in the final, which is in England next summer.

In the limited-overs matches before the Tests, Australia won the one-day series 2-1, while India took the T20s by the same scoreline.

Australia's preparations have not only been hit by the injury to Warner, but also a concussion suffered by uncapped Will Pucovski, who would have been in line to fill the vacancy at the top of the order.

Matthew Wade now looks set to partner Joe Burns in opening the batting, but there was a further concern when number-one ranked Test batsman Steve Smith failed to net on Tuesday because of a back problem.

"His preparation has been very good," said home captain Tim Paine. "He's batted for the last week since we've been in Adelaide. So for him to have a day off might actually be a blessing in disguise.

"Whether he's fit and sore in the back, or stiff in the back, I think he normally gets up, gets through it and finds a way to score runs like he always does."

Australia are set to give a debut to 21-year-old all-rounder Cameron Green, who himself has recovered from a concussion.

Much excitement surrounds Green, who averages 55 with the bat and 21 with the ball in first-class cricket, often bowling at high pace.

"We know that when he does bowl he'll make an impact, that's what we have seen from him and that's what we expect him to do again," said Paine.

India have only played a day-night Test once before, a home defeat of Bangladesh, and face a huge task against an Australia team that have won all seven of their day-nighters, five of which have been in Adelaide.

Not only that, but they do so knowing this will be their only Test with talismanic skipper Kohli in charge.

They will also be without Rohit, who has been suffering with a hamstring injury, for the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne, but he could be available for the matches in Sydney and Brisbane.

With Rohit unavailable, Prithvi Shaw has been chosen to open the batting with Mayank Agarwal, while the experienced Wriddhiman Saha has been given the nod to keep wicket ahead of Rishabh Pant.

R Ashwin is chosen ahead of Ravindra Jadeja to fill the spinner's berth, while Umesh Yadav joins Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammad Shami in the three-man pace attack.

"A pink-ball Test is probably going to be a bit more challenging in terms of conditions and how the ball moves around in the evening," said Kohli.

"For us, it's about being able to adapt to different conditions. You can take inspiration from the past but I don't think that guarantees anything and we have to stay in the present."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/55332212
 
India have lost 2 Test matches in a row right now. Expect it to be 6 losses in a row by the end of the tour.

The Indian team looks toothless and washed up. While Aussies look exciting and fearsome.
 
India XI already announced.

EpV90lvUUAQ7jOf
 
India keep messing up playing Ashwin overseas. Jadeja has outperformed him with both bat and ball overseas over the past 2 years IIRC.
 
India keep messing up playing Ashwin overseas. Jadeja has outperformed him with both bat and ball overseas over the past 2 years IIRC.

Maybe Jadeja is still recovering from the concussion injury for which they subbed in Chahhal ;)
 
Should be a good series this.

Maybe not as one-sided as expected.
 
Was the perfect opportunity to give Gill his first Test.
 
Woo hoo
So pumped for this
Being DN is almost a bummer as the Adelaide/Eastern state matches usually start at like 8 for me in Perth
 
Woo hoo
So pumped for this
Being DN is almost a bummer as the Adelaide/Eastern state matches usually start at like 8 for me in Perth

For an Aussie fan it will be a fun series!

Personally really excited for Green. He can hopefully became the all rounder Aus needs.
 
Being D/N, not starting at 11:30 PM for me in EST, US , past my bedtime on a weeknight. But, with pink ball, first few overs will be interesting and also overs under the light, will watch some early morning.
 
Maybe Jadeja is still recovering from the concussion injury for which they subbed in Chahhal ;)

I see what you did there :inti Regardless, this isn't the first time they've done it. They played Ashwin over Jadeja in England 2 years ago and in NZ earlier this year for the first matches, and as expected he did poorly. jadeja came in for the last test both times and outperformed Ashwin.
 
Looking forward to a cracker of a test match and series. Hopefully we put the NZ debacle behind us and take the recent LOI cricket momentum forward. Absence of Ishant , Jaddu, Rohit and Kohli is going to be a challenge but a top team needs to have bench and no excuses should be given like what we heard the last time when Smith and Warner wasn't available. Good selection headache with Pant/Saha and Gill/Rahul/Shaw. I personally would have let Vihari open and KL face the soft ball at 6 but happy with this team as well. Winning the toss and getting 20 wickets is crucial and hope our bowlers make the Aussie batsman dance under lights. Game on and come on India.
 
I just hope that we could somehow take the game on DAY 5(even that is highly unlikely). One sided phainta awaits.
 
Ishant Sharma is going to be sorely missed. Umesh would be cannon fodder to this strong aussie lineup...
 
Excited for this. Prithvi fans have gotten emotional watching their players being attacked lol :yk
 
Looking forward to this. I want to see real cricket. Tired of Covid induced dead life
 
I'm still genuinely upset that Kohli will miss the last 3 Tests. Add to that we are missing Ishant. Would be a miracle if we somehow, someway draw this series.
 
It's going to be a great humiliation for Indian team....the very sight of smith coming on to bat will demoralize this team...I'm not going to watch this series.
 
Advance congratulations to Australia on winning the series 4-0
 
I'm still genuinely upset that Kohli will miss the last 3 Tests. Add to that we are missing Ishant. Would be a miracle if we somehow, someway draw this series.

Three? I thought he was planning to miss 2. Why is he even here?
 
Three? I thought he was planning to miss 2. Why is he even here?

He will be leaving after the first Test. He will miss the next 3 Tests. I'm such a big fan of him. Me loving Test cricket after Sachin's retirement has a lot to do with him. Not that I won't watch the rest of the Tests that he will miss, it's just that I'l miss him a lot in action.
 
One of the best series promo i have seen in recent time . Indian channels broadcasting team should take some lesson.
 
It's going to be a great humiliation for Indian team....the very sight of smith coming on to bat will demoralize this team...I'm not going to watch this series.

You should the series to enjoy the humiliation. It would be a vicarious victory for the mighty green army.
 
I have been to every previous Adelaide Day/Night Test of the modern era.

Today’s pitch has shorter grass than usual, like for Pakistan last year.

It’s a shame: the best Adelaide Day/Night Tests are the ones in which scores are lowest.

The first one was 210 v 230 v 205 v 180-7.

What a match that was!
 
Lovely Dean Jones tribute on Channel 7. What a sad loss.
 
For those interested in the grassy nature of the pitch vs other Adelaide D/N Test lengths.

Has been cut to 8mm today- the first year or two it was 1cm or more. By comparison grass length on NZ pitches these days is often 10-12mm (why it looks so green, longer grass equals more color held/shown even IF the pitch as actually only as moist as a less green looking pitch with shorter grass- more soil visible through it to lessen the visual effect.
 
Hoping India wins the toss and bat first
The grass is too short today, but in the early Adelaide Day/Night Tests you really needed to understand that the sun sets later than at Brisbane.

This meant you could bat aggressively for 2 sessions and try to declare on around 220, then use the twilight to wipe out the opposition top order.

The grass is too short today, which is a shame, because I liked the idea of:

Team A declares at Dinner on 230-5 after 52 overs.

Team B falls to 30-6 in 12 overs at Drinks, is 100 all out.

Team A declares at 230-5 again at Dinner on Day 2, setting a target of 360 to win.

Team B is 80-6 at the close of Day 2.
 
I still think you want a new ball straight after Dinner, at 7 pm, as the sum is setting.

That’s how to take wickets in these conditions.
 
Don't mind that, stops the dumb posters from saying the only way Aus win is due to the toss
 
I still think you want a new ball straight after Dinner, at 7 pm, as the sum is setting.

That’s how to take wickets in these conditions.

You were saying this last year and it ended up being irrelevant. Just score as many as possible
 
So finally Kohli wins a toss in an overseas test.
 
Australia (Playing XI):
Joe Burns,
Matthew Wade,
Marnus Labuschagne,
Steven Smith,
Travis Head,
Cameron Green,
Tim Paine(w/c),
Pat Cummins,
Mitchell Starc,
Nathan Lyon,
Josh Hazlewood
 
Harsha saying 8mm grass on the pitch I thought win the toss and bowl first will be right decision..

I think this post was on cricbuzz by just a fan, so I will not take it seriously. Harsha didn't said that bowling first will be right decision. You should always bat in the first test after you win the toss away from home and I stick to this opinion of mine.
 
Virat Kohli W-L record after winning toss in Tests:
Mat 26*
Won 21
Lost 0
Draw 4
 
I think this post was on cricbuzz by just a fan, so I will not take it seriously. Harsha didn't said that bowling first will be right decision. You should always bat in the first test after you win the toss away from home and I stick to this opinion of mine.

Ya :sarf2

8mm is decent but not enough to give up batting first.
okay
 
Australia (Playing XI):
Joe Burns,
Matthew Wade,
Marnus Labuschagne,
Steven Smith,
Travis Head,
Cameron Green,
Tim Paine(w/c),
Pat Cummins,
Mitchell Starc,
Nathan Lyon,
Josh Hazlewood

No surprises.

I'm hyped!
 
Perfect BUT they need to understand that they must bowl with a New Ball in the twilight - you don’t want to bat an extra 30 overs, score an extra 100 runs, but then have to use the new ball in Daylight tomorrow.

Last year Pakistan did an awful lot of twilight bowling v Australia, but always with an old ball which had gone soft.

FAF basically lost the Day/Night Test here in 2016 by scoring too slowly and declaring too late.

He should have declared at Dinner at 165-7, but he batted on until Night had fallen and he declared at 259-9. Australia then survived 12 overs of stable floodlit conditions without losing a wicket.

Whereas if he had batted more aggressively in the second session they could have been 170 all out, but would have had a new ball as the sun set and could have hoped to have Australia 70-6 by the close.
 
Perfect BUT they need to understand that they must bowl with a New Ball in the twilight - you don’t want to bat an extra 30 overs, score an extra 100 runs, but then have to use the new ball in Daylight tomorrow.

Last year Pakistan did an awful lot of twilight bowling v Australia, but always with an old ball which had gone soft.

FAF basically lost the Day/Night Test here in 2016 by scoring too slowly and declaring too late.

<B>He should have declared at Dinner at 165-7, but he batted on until Night had fallen and he declared at 259-9. Australia then survived 12 overs of stable floodlit conditions without losing a wicket.</B>

Whereas if he had batted more aggressively in the second session they could have been 170 all out, but would have had a new ball as the sun set and could have hoped to have Australia 70-6 by the close.

So, is it full third session or just final hour of play? From 165-7 to 259-9 is impressive lower order batting.
 
So finally Kohli wins a toss in an overseas test.
Which is fine, so long as he understands the importance of bowling with a new ball as the sun sets.

I think at Adelaide in a Day-Nighter you really need to win the toss, bat and treat it as a 50 over innings. That’s why I’d play Pant, Pandya and Rohit here.

For India now, there are two roads to victory.

One is to bat 2 sessions - 50 overs - score 250 and declare.

The other is to bat for 5 sessions and score 450, and have a new ball after Dinner tomorrow.
 
Perfect BUT they need to understand that they must bowl with a New Ball in the twilight - you don’t want to bat an extra 30 overs, score an extra 100 runs, but then have to use the new ball in Daylight tomorrow.

Last year Pakistan did an awful lot of twilight bowling v Australia, but always with an old ball which had gone soft.

FAF basically lost the Day/Night Test here in 2016 by scoring too slowly and declaring too late.

He should have declared at Dinner at 165-7, but he batted on until Night had fallen and he declared at 259-9. Australia then survived 12 overs of stable floodlit conditions without losing a wicket.

Whereas if he had batted more aggressively in the second session they could have been 170 all out, but would have had a new ball as the sun set and could have hoped to have Australia 70-6 by the close.

Sunset in Adelaide though was scheduled at 8.26 pm on Wednesday and that meant that the Indians would have literally got not more than five minutes of batting after dark.
 
India have lost 2 Test matches in a row right now. Expect it to be 6 losses in a row by the end of the tour.

The Indian team looks toothless and washed up. While Aussies look exciting and fearsome.

Hmmm....whilst I agree we may not be diamond crazy fav for the series and 'possibly' might even loose the series, 0-4 is a bit of hike and definitely not in the 'legend's league of 0-12...:irfan
 
Virat has never lost a test after winning the toss : Cricbuzz

It's going to be a thriller. Aussies are missing Warner big time.
 
Sunset in Adelaide though was scheduled at 8.26 pm on Wednesday and that meant that the Indians would have literally got not more than five minutes of batting after dark.
The stadium is tall: you will see after Dinner that the light will be fading because the sun will be behind the western stands.

I have a whole ritual: I go back to the InterContinental to eat in the lounge at 6 and walk back over the bridge at 6.45 to watch the whole final session. And artificial light is already predominating by 7: on the bridge outside it’s still daylight but in the ground the floodlights are taking over.

It’s different to Brisbane. Adelaide is 2 sessions of daylight, and the final session has impossible batting conditions in the FIRST hour 7-8 pm, but then it gets easier.
 
This'll probably be the closest of the 4 matches. Pink ball tests are usually low scoring games.
 
Adelaide and Sydney are my bets for an India win but things need to go our way.
 
Sunset in Adelaide though was scheduled at 8.26 pm on Wednesday and that meant that the Indians would have literally got not more than five minutes of batting after dark.
Also, Dinner is usually taken at around 55 overs (6.20 pm).

The final session usually goes til 9.30, but only 7-8 pm is hard to bat in. By the final hour the ball is going soft and the light is stable.
 
Excited for the series. I hope India competes well and gives a good fight, irrespective of the match result.
 
So he proved me wrong as he survived one extra delivery than my prediction. :inti

This was bound to happen.
 
The grass is too short today, but in the early Adelaide Day/Night Tests you really needed to understand that the sun sets later than at Brisbane.

This meant you could bat aggressively for 2 sessions and try to declare on around 220, then use the twilight to wipe out the opposition top order.

The grass is too short today, which is a shame, because I liked the idea of:

Team A declares at Dinner on 230-5 after 52 overs.

Team B falls to 30-6 in 12 overs at Drinks, is 100 all out.

Team A declares at 230-5 again at Dinner on Day 2, setting a target of 360 to win.

Team B is 80-6 at the close of Day 2.

Worth noting that 8mm is at at least double what might be left on some Indian pitches & longer than standard Australian pitches.
 
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