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India v Australia | 3rd Test | Indore | Mar 01-Mar 05 | Pre-match Discussion

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So the BGT now retained, India can worry about things like a 4-0 whitewash which Australia will be desperate to avoid!

India have announced the next 2 Tests:

Rohit Sharma (Captain), K L Rahul, Shubman Gill, Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, KS Bharat (wk), Ishan Kishan (wk), Ravichandran Ashwin, Axar Patel, Kuldeep Yadav, Ravindra Jadeja, Mohd. Shami, Mohd. Siraj, Shreyas Iyer, Suryakumar Yadav, Umesh Yadav, Jaydev Unadkat.

Australia will need to do something special now - what that is not clear right now.
 
Pat Cummins will return to Australia due to a family illness but is expected to head back to India before the start of the third Test.

The Australia Test cricket captain will return home briefly due to a family illness while the rest of the team remains in the sub-continent.

The 29-year-old will travel to Sydney before re-joining the team in India ahead of the third Test in Indore that is set to start on March 1.

Cummins has taken three wickets at an average of 39.66 in the series so far as Australia has been outplayed by India and lost the opening two Tests.

An embattled Australia outfit will be looking to bounce back in the remaining two Tests in the series after India reclaimed the Border-Gavaskar Trophy with a six-wicket victory in Delhi.

The Australia players will now take time to regroup before shifting their attention to the third Test at Holkar Cricket Stadium.

Cummins’ team were bowled out for 113 in their second innings of the second Test after a collapse early on day three.

India’s premium all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja took a Test career-best 7-42 to skittle Australia in Delhi.

In some positive news for Australia, Mitchell Swepson could rejoin the team after leaving the squad before the second Test for the birth of his first child.

Australia squad: Pat Cummins (c), Ashton Agar, Scott Boland, Alex Carey (wk), Cameron Green, Peter Handscomb, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Usman Khawaja, Matt Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Lance Morris, Todd Murphy, Matthew Renshaw, Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, Mitchell Swepson, David Warner

ICC
 
9 day is too long gap between the test . Australia should Play 3 days practice match against qny ranji teams
 
FpZUmr8aAAAVcdz
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">"You've got to find a way to put pressure on the bowlers."<br><br>Pat Cummins evaluates Australia's performance in the first two Tests <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/INDvAUS?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#INDvAUS</a> <a href="https://t.co/MMhmqBmbu5">pic.twitter.com/MMhmqBmbu5</a></p>— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) <a href="https://twitter.com/cricketcomau/status/1627593443081080833?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 20, 2023</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Having already lost the first two Tests of the ongoing four-match series in India, Australia have further been dented by fitness concerns in their camp.

Australia will miss the services of Josh Hazlewood for the remainder of the Border-Gavaskar Test series, with the right-arm quick having not yet recovered from Achilles tendonitis. Hazlewood had picked up the injury during the New Year’s Test against South Africa in Sydney last month. His unavailability at the start of the ongoing series prompted Scott Boland’s inclusion in the first Test in Nagpur, before Australia opted for a 3-1 spin-pace combination in the second Test in Delhi. He will now fly back home to continue his rehabilitation programme in Sydney.

Head coach Andrew McDonald confirmed Hazlewood's unavailability, and expressed uncertainty over David Warner, who had sustained an elbow injury during the Delhi Test and was subsequently subbed out of the game with a concussion.

"Josh Hazlewood is out, he'll be going home," McDonald said on Monday, February 20.

"[Warner]'s still sore at the moment. We had a meeting just before discussing through this. We're in no rush to make any decisions at this point in time around Davey. Just seeing how that settles, how functional that is.

"It will be basically how sore and how functional it is as to what decision we make with him and then the length of the injury. There's some talk the length of injury could be anywhere between a week plus depending how that settles down. There's a bit of unknown there. I'll leave that to the medical team and they'll inform me once they know."

Travis Head, who top-scored in Australia’s unimpressive second innings show in Delhi with a stroke-filled 43, is primed to partner Usman Khawaja at the top in the next two Tests should Warner fail to recover.

"If Dave's unavailable it would make perfect sense," McDonald said. "We did discuss before coming over here that if we were to lose an opening batter that Trav would be one we'd look to put up there. We feel in the subcontinental conditions that he can get off to the fast starts which he showed.

"We don't see [Head] as an opener in all conditions, more subcontinental and in other conditions back to the middle order."

Meanwhile, Cameron Green and Mitchell Starc, both of whom were out of action recently with finger injuries, are expected to be fit and available for the third Test, having narrowly missed out on playing in Delhi.

"He was close," McDonald said of Green. "It's building the confidence. He had the setback in Bangalore, a little setback batting in Bangalore where he had some jarring and there was a fair bit of discomfort in that finger. If he didn't have that, I think the second Test was real. But it probably just delayed it those few days. And we contemplated him as a concussion sub as well. So that was another discussion. But we felt like if he wasn't right to go at the start then what was a couple of days. We're better off loading up for the third Test match and in a good frame of mind."

Skipper Pat Cummins has flown back home for family reasons, but is expected to be back in time to lead the side in the third Test, which will be played at the Holkar Cricket Stadium, Indore from March 1.

ICC
 
India are winning this series 4-0. India will beat Aussies in the 1 off final as well, they are a better side then Australia in all conditions.
 
India are winning this series 4-0. India will beat Aussies in the 1 off final as well, they are a better side then Australia in all conditions.

Early June at the Oval with the ball seaming about — pretty early in the English summer to be playing this game.
Ashwin and Jadeja neutered.
I think my money would be on the Aussie pacers to be honest
 
Early June at the Oval with the ball seaming about — pretty early in the English summer to be playing this game.
Ashwin and Jadeja neutered.
I think my money would be on the Aussie pacers to be honest

India lacks inform seamers for that TC final. India's way of winning at home is lower order putting up score and Ash/Jad running through them. Both will not happen there.
 
Early June at the Oval with the ball seaming about — pretty early in the English summer to be playing this game.
Ashwin and Jadeja neutered.
I think my money would be on the Aussie pacers to be honest

India should play 3 proper seamers (like Bumrah + Shami + Siraj) instead of mixing Shardul Thakur (if he plays he should be 4th seamer). Jadeja should be the lone spinner (don't think Axar's batting is tested in overseas conditions and Ashwin's batting is not sufficient & he has similar effectiveness as Jadeja in bowling). Team can be something like this:

Rohit
Gill (should take this gamble - his sublime form can help)
Pujara (its too late to risk dropping him now)
Kohli (same as Pujara)
Iyer/Rahul (if team wants to persist with Rahul, if he has some kind of form/skills compared to others in overseas, let him bat here! Because at No.1 he is a kind of lottery - 1 success/9 failures kind of thing! Gill at least gives 50-50% chance)
Jadeja
Bharat (we badly miss Pant, but we have to persist with Bharat a proper test prospect. No Ishan or others please)
Thakur
Shami
Bumrah (if he is not fit, we are severely affected)
Siraj

If the pitch is too flat, then Axar can play in place of Thakur to strengthen batting & to tighten up bowling (but Thakur can pick wickets if pitch assists pacers a bit) If the pitch is too dry, then Ashwin can play to handle Australian left-handers. Outside this I hope the TM doesn't do severe blunders... I hope Gill plays the next 2 tests in this series to get in shape before taking on overseas challenge...
 
Injury sees veteran Australia opener ruled out of India Test tour

Australia's injury woes have continued to worsen with veteran opener David Warner set to miss the remainder of the Test series against India due to an elbow injury.

Warner was in the wars when he hurt his elbow while batting during Australia's first innings in the second Test in Delhi and the left-hander was substituted out of the match with concussion.

The concussion wasn't the only concern for Warner, as scans confirmed a hairline fracture of his elbow and the 36-year-old will return home to Australia to recoup.

"David Warner has been ruled out of the Test tour of India and will return home," a Cricket Australia statement read.

"Warner was struck on the elbow in the second Test in Delhi and sustained a hairline fracture.

"After further assessment, he will require a period of rehabilitation which will preclude any further involvement in the remainder of the Test series.

"It is currently anticipated that he will return to India for the three One-Day Internationals which follow the Test Series."

ICC
 
Will a change in personnel, change Australia's fortunes? I frankly think it's too late. Only way they can make a comeback is if India drop the intensity
 
If India wins this Test, they are confirmed finalists for the WTC.

Need to keep the energy up and put OZ under pressure from ball 1. I hope we get to bat first on a similar deck and see how much we can score upfront .
 
India should play 3 proper seamers (like Bumrah + Shami + Siraj) instead of mixing Shardul Thakur (if he plays he should be 4th seamer). Jadeja should be the lone spinner (don't think Axar's batting is tested in overseas conditions and Ashwin's batting is not sufficient & he has similar effectiveness as Jadeja in bowling). Team can be something like this:

Rohit
Gill (should take this gamble - his sublime form can help)
Pujara (its too late to risk dropping him now)
Kohli (same as Pujara)
Iyer/Rahul (if team wants to persist with Rahul, if he has some kind of form/skills compared to others in overseas, let him bat here! Because at No.1 he is a kind of lottery - 1 success/9 failures kind of thing! Gill at least gives 50-50% chance)
Jadeja
Bharat (we badly miss Pant, but we have to persist with Bharat a proper test prospect. No Ishan or others please)
Thakur
Shami
Bumrah (if he is not fit, we are severely affected)
Siraj

If the pitch is too flat, then Axar can play in place of Thakur to strengthen batting & to tighten up bowling (but Thakur can pick wickets if pitch assists pacers a bit) If the pitch is too dry, then Ashwin can play to handle Australian left-handers. Outside this I hope the TM doesn't do severe blunders... I hope Gill plays the next 2 tests in this series to get in shape before taking on overseas challenge...

agreed. we need to be flexible. need to decide the final XI only a day before. look at the final pitch & weather forecast a day before the match and finalize the XI. if cloudy conditions and seaming track must go with 4 pacers, shouldn't care for that 20 extra runs which ashwin could score. if warm weather forecast and pitch looks to be worn out in a couple of days then ashwin. jadeja stays in both cases.
 
Delhi: Australia coach Andrew McDonald has defended the team’s preparation for the series in India, as the visitors were dealt another setback as they aim to avert a second whitewash in 10 years on these shores.

The Australians will take several days off in Delhi this week to freshen up mentally after a challenging first two Tests, where they have been beaten twice inside three days.

Several players had intended to hit the nets on Monday, but there is nowhere for them to train.

Questions have been raised over the team’s preparation after another poor performance with the bat cost them a shot at what would have been a memorable series-levelling victory.

In 2017, the team had a 10-day training camp in Dubai before arriving in India for a tour game and hitting the ground running with a crushing victory in Pune. This time, they had a shorter camp in Bangalore and did not play a warm-up match, as part of a plan to have players fresher at the end of the series.

“I still wouldn’t have changed what we did leading in, there’s no doubt about that,” McDonald said on Monday.

“I think they had really good preparation in Bangalore, so that’s not any excuses. We sit here right now - I think at the end of day two, if you said our preparation was good, you’d probably have a different slant on it, but within an hour then people start to critique what happened in the past.

“I think, at that point in time, that the preparation was really good and the way we’re going about our work was good. I don’t think that had a great bearing on what happened in that hour, we were prepared for that as well as we could have been, and we failed under the examination of India.”

There has been a marked shift in Australia’s approach with the bat. Six years ago, there was a focus among batters to trust their defence. The talk this tour has been for players to be brave and proactive, but it edged into recklessness when the visitors lost 8-28 to blow a golden chance of victory.

Six players lost their wicket to the sweep shot on a track playing low, including Steve Smith, who rarely plays the stroke. The proactive approached worked in periods, but there was no stopping India once the wickets started falling.

“We aren’t saying that one’s got your name on it ... we are saying the wicket and surface was bearable for periods of time where it is not the case,” McDonald said.

“Will a ball do something different off the surface? Of course it will, and that is an element of luck - hoping that ball will go past the edge or scunge down and roll past the backward point for a couple of runs.

“I’m not saying the conditions were diabolical by any stretch of the imagination - if you apply the method over a period of time, as we saw with Uz [Khawaja] and Pete Handscomb they did it totally differently.

“Everyone is going to have a different way of doing it and what we need to do is be clear on what works for the individual, and it is clear that some went away from the method they usually use, and you know who they are.”

A week ago, McDonald had put forward a different line of thinking after the big loss in Nagpur.

“If you stand still and look to defend for long periods of time against that quality spin line-up, you’ve got pretty much a ball with a number on it and, unfortunately, we weren’t able to get into the method that we wanted to apply,” McDonald said last week.

“We saw very little sweeping, which is something that we valued leading in as well. So we’ll review why that was the case.”

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricke...ralia-s-test-preparation-20230220-p5cm1z.html
 
Top order runs have been high among Australia’s issues in India but “bridging the gap” to India’s stellar lower order could be key to a turnaround in fortunes, and Mitchell Starc’s imminent inclusion could help.

Unused and unwanted spinner Ashton Agar will join the exodus of players heading home joining injured batter David Warner and bowler Josh Hazlewood having been overlooked for the first two Tests.

He is expected to return for the ODI series and is not injured.

Agar, who has a Test high score of 99, was left on the bench while another left-arm spinner, Matt Kuhnemann, was flown to India and made his debut in the second Test in Delhi.

That was the second of a second consecutive second innings collapse which have been the main contributors to two ugly losses in the opening two Tests but on both occasions India’s tail has more than wagged to rescue their own team.

In the second Test in Delhi, Australia had India on the ropes at 7-139, with a lead of 124, before Axar Patel and R Ashwin added 114 for the eighth wicket to bring their team to level-pegging with the tourists.

The Australians could have had an even bigger lead but went from 6-227 to all out for 263.

At Nagpur in the first Test, Australia lost their final four wickets for 17 runs, while Ravindra Jadeja, Axar and Mohammed Shami added 160 for the last three wickets to give India a massive lead of 223.

A tail which included captain Pat Cummins and veteran spinner Nathan Lyon, as well as rookie spinners Todd Murphy and Matthew Kuhnemann has contributed little and it’s an issue the Australians need to address in the third Test in Indore.

That could be where Starc’s inclusion makes a difference.

“That’s a hard one especially when two guys are brand new to Test cricket and coming in there,” batting coach Michael Di Venuto said.

“Nathan (Lyon) has shown some good resolve. It’s encouraging; (there will) potentially (be) changes. Potentially Starcy comes in, who’s done well with the bat here in the past. That adds a little bit more depth to the batting.

“Patty (Cummins) showed in the first innings a good method of defence and attack, so it is there. The younger ones, that’s a work in progress. That’s a big learning curve for them with the bat and the ball.”

The lack of an all-rounder in the Australian team has added a hurdle selectors have failed to overcome, unable to match the likes of Patel, who averages nearly 32 in Test cricket, while Ashwin has five Test centuries and bats at number nine.

Two of Starc’s 10 Test half-centuries have come in India, including his highest score of 99 made in Mohali in 2013, raising hope his injection could help the Australians with the bat as well as the ball.

“They bat right through to nine, and that’s the reality,” Australian coach Andrew McDonald said after the loss in Delhi.

“On the flip side to that, we’ve got to make sure we bridge that difference with our lower order as well. That’s been a distinct difference in the two Test matches so far, where you get a team five down and suddenly they creep out. They got 400 in that first game in Nagpur; it wasn’t a 400 wicket.

“We need to find runs. We knew that before we came away, that runs is always the biggest challenge in India. We felt like we’d be able to take 20 wickets, but how we find runs is really important.

“Mitchell Starc coming in, he’s had some good success with the bat, albeit he’s a lower-order player. He got 99 in Mohali (in 2013) and 62 in Pune (in 2017) on a spinning wicket as well. Do we play two quicks? All those conversations are happening but the bottom line is we do need to find runs, and that’s our big question.”

Cameron Green is likely to return with Starc for the third Test, adding batting and bowling strength which could see Australia go with just two specialist spinners, and Travis Head as support.

https://www.foxsports.com.au/cricke...d/news-story/935b2469a2786b7e6c222e4d589db27b
 
More bad news for Australia...

==

Steve Smith will take the captaincy reins in India after Australia announced captain Pat Cummins would not return for the third Test in Indore next week due to a family illness.

Cummins flew home to Sydney following the Aussies' second-Test defeat last week, explaining in a statement that his mother "is ill and in palliative care".

With a nine-day break between Tests following the three-day finish in Delhi, it had been hoped the 29-year-old would return to India for the third Test beginning Wednesday.

But Australia confirmed on Friday Cummins would miss the Indore Test. They are keeping the door open for him to return for the fourth Test in Ahmedabad, but Smith could end up captaining in both the remaining matches.

"I have decided against returning to India at this time," said Cummins. "I feel I am best being here with my family.

"I appreciate the overwhelming support I have received from Cricket Australia and my teammates. Thanks for your understanding."

Smith spent four days in Dubai with his wife Dani following the second Test before re-joining the Australia squad in Delhi on Thursday evening (India time), when he was informed of Cummins' decision to remain at home for the next Test.

The wider playing group was informed at training on Friday morning at Arun Jaitley Stadium. The Aussies are training in the Indian capital for two more days before flying to Indore on Sunday.

It will be the third time Smith has led the Test side since his reinstatement as vice-captain in late 2021 when Cummins took over from Tim Paine. Smith has filled in as skipper for two Tests that Cummins has been unavailable for - both of which have been in Adelaide over the past two summers.

Smith was captain for 34 Tests between 2014 and 2018, including Australia's most recent Test tour of India in 2017, a controversy-marred campaign which Smith dominated with the bat, scoring three centuries.

It has so far been a less prolific series this time around for the star right-hander, who has scored 71 runs at 23.66 in four innings so far.

While the leadership transfer should prove smooth enough given Smith's extensive leadership history, Australia's selectors now must decide on how to balance the bowling attack in Cummins' absence.

Three spinners could again be on the cards if the pitch is anticipated to take turn, especially now after Cameron Green declared himself fit again after a finger injury sidelined him from the first two Tests against India.

Green’s return would give Australia a second seam-bowling option after Cummins was the sole quick in Delhi.

Mitchell Starc, who is also on the mend from a serious finger concern, is expected to be available to play and could be a direct replacement for Cummins.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/pat...mily-emergency-steve-smith-captain/2023-02-24
 
Australia’s Cameron Green has declared himself “100% ready” for the third Border-Gavaskar Trophy Test due to be played in Indore.

Green had broken a finger while batting during the Boxing Day Test against South Africa last year.

The Western Australia player was very close to playing the second Test in Delhi but eventually decided against it.

“I was so, so close last game, but I think probably having an extra week has helped a lot, I am 100% ready to go,” Green went on to explain why he missed the Delhi Test. “It’s just a few instances in the nets where I'd go for a sweep and it just jarred the end of my bat.

“We probably just thought that we'd sacrifice a game and with obviously the year ahead that we've got, it's probably the right call.”

Green’s return to the setup is a big relief for the Australia side, which is already battling injuries and departures. The likes of David Warner, Ashton Agar and Josh Hazlewood have already left, while skipper Pat Cummins is also in Australia to attend to a family emergency.

Cummins will miss the third Test in Indore, with Steve Smith taking over as the skipper.

In Green, Australia will relish an added pace bowling option. The all-rounder has 806 Test runs at an average of 35.04 and six half-centuries to his name. He has also picked 23 wickets at an average of 29.78, with one five-for.

The third game between India and Australia is all set to begin from March 1, with India leading the four-match series 2-0.

ICC
 
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I think Gill will replace Rahul. Australia will probably go with 3 spinners again. With Cummins not playing third test. Stark or Green will replace him.
 
Yaaro, hope our guys dont get too gung ho and carried away but stay focussed
too many times in recent past when we have been the fav, we have under delivered.
Guys like Smith, labs wont give too many chances and are due a big one.
time Che pu, Virat and Iyer fired. guessing TM will go with Gill for rahul.
just hoping over confidense does not creep in.
 
I think Gill will replace Rahul. Australia will probably go with 3 spinners again. With Cummins not playing third test. Stark or Green will replace him.

Green will replace Warner and Stark will fill in for Cummins.
 
Aussie issue seems to be batting. Their bowling is fine.

They can pack up their team with 4 spinners but they may still lose due to batting issue.
 
Former Australia quick Mitchell Johnson has claimed the current side "don't look as if they care enough", having "folded" in the first two Tests against India.

Australia were full of confidence ahead of the trip as they looked to claim a first series in India since 2004. They entered the series as the number one ranked team in the world, having only lost one of their last 15 games.

However, their hopes of regaining the Border-Gavaskar Trophy evaporated inside just six days of cricket as they fell to a humiliating innings defeat in Nagpur and then suffered a calamitous collapse in Delhi as India took an unassailable 2-0 lead in the series.

India do have a remarkable record at home, having lost just one series to England in 2012 since Australia last beat them 19 years ago, but Johnson is more concerned with the manner of Australia's defeats and believes the tour has "descended into a bit of a debacle".

In his latest column for the West Australian, Johnson said: "At 2-0 down, it's time for players to look in the mirror and take it upon themselves. Australia boast three of the top four Test batsmen in the world according to the current rankings, with Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith the top two.

"It's time for them to stand up. The Australian cricketers are living in such a bubble at the moment. I know what that's like because I've been there.

"Everything that's being thrown at you from the outside, you can sort of block it out. But the risk is coming across as being a little too relaxed about losing a series inside six days that you were expected to be highly competitive in.

"From the outside, it doesn't look as if they care enough. Losing isn't the issue. It's the way they've folded that has been the most disappointing part.

"The tour has descended into a bit of a debacle with injuries, selection puzzlers and players coming home left, right and centre. None of it has made much sense."

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/sport/cri...p&cvid=a20106124f8841abbf69760503da7590&ei=16
 
Mitchell Starc will need to push through pain in his likely return to lead Australia's Test attack in the absence of Pat Cummins, with his finger still not completely healed from a severe tendon injury.

The Aussies have been without one of the main subcontinental bowling weapons for their first two Test defeats to India, though Starc was available for selection for the second match in Delhi where the hosts retained the Border Gavaskar Trophy.

The left-armer's left middle finger was in a splint for six weeks after he injured it in a freak fielding mishap during the Boxing Day Test.

There is still considerable scar tissue and swelling in the finger that is crucial to his release of the ball. Starc had to let the ball go off his ring and index fingers while he trained during his layoff before resuming his more normal bowling action in recent weeks.

"It's a Test match, it's good enough," Starc told reporters at Indore's colourful Holkar Stadium where Australia trained for the first time on Monday, two days out from the third Test.

"There's going to be a level of discomfort for a little while, I don't think it is going to be 100 per cent for a little while, but the ball is coming out quite nicely and I feel like I'm pretty much at full tilt.

"It wouldn't be the first Test match I've played in some sort of discomfort. If I only played when I was at 100 per cent, I would have only played five or 10 Tests.

"I'm happy with where it's at and I've built up enough of a pain threshold to deal with that stuff over the last 10 or 12 years."

Starc underlined his toughness when he kept bowling with the badly-damaged finger at the MCG in December against South Africa, doing so after refusing to get a pain-killing injection because he wanted to retain feeling in it.

To his and captain Cummins' surprise, the 33-year-old swung the ball despite the discomfort but found the wobble-seam delivery he has learnt off Cummins and Josh Hazlewood more difficult to bowl.

Starc was coy when asked if he had regained the ability to bowl it, smiling as he said: "I guess we'll find out."

With Cummins having flown home last week due to a family illness, Starc could find some extra pace support from Cameron Green, who is also firming for a recall after his own finger injury.

Scott Boland, who performed strongly in the series opener, could also come into the mix if only two spinners are required.

Nathan Lyon and Todd Murphy will be celebrating the return of Starc given his footmarks will help create rough to bowl into against India's right-hander heavy top-order.

Starc insisted he had no concerns over shouldering a heavy workload in Indore.

"I had 10 days off when I first did the injury and then I've been bowling since," he said.

"Workload-wise, body-wise no concern at all, I'm comfortable and happy with where my numbers are, where my body is at preparing for this series and then obviously not having the first two Tests to continue that as well.

"In that regard very happy with where it's all at, now it's just an execution of skills having had a break from game time."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/mit...rd-test-indore-pitch-cummins-green/2023-02-27
 
Shastri predicts change in India's top-order for third Test against Australia

Ravi Shastri wants to see Shubman Gill given another chance during the remaining Border-Gavaskar Tests against Australia.

Despite some impressive recent form against both the red-ball and in the limited overs arena, Gill has been overlooked for the opening two Tests against Australia as selectors have opted for more experienced options at the top of India's batting order.

Gill hit his maiden Test century against Bangladesh in December and has put his name at the forefront of selectors' minds with four white-ball centuries for his country - including a magnificent 208 in an ODI against New Zealand last month - already this year.

Shastri was speaking with host Sanjana Ganesan on the most recent episode of The ICC Review and the former national coach believes the time is right for Gill to be parachuted back into India's XI and be given another opportunity to show his wares.

"He (Gill) is that good at the moment and whether he scores or doesn’t score, on form, on merit, he deserves a chance," Shastri said.

"When you have a player that confident and then his performances off late and the way he's batted – there'll be a lot of players in that team thinking within themselves ‘How’s this guy not playing?’

"They must be thinking, to be honest, it's like that, the dressing room. I know that dressing room. They'll be feeling ‘Gee man, this guy is hot'."

If Gill does earn a recall for the third Test that commences in Indore on Wednesday then selectors have a number of options at their disposal when deciding the final make-up of their XI.

Experienced top-order performers KL Rahul and Cheteshwar Pujara are yet to fire this series, while Shreyas Iyer managed just 16 runs from his two innings during India's six-wicket victory in the second Test in Delhi.

Shastri is predicting Gill to earn a recall to India's top-order for the third Test and he does not expect this to upset team balance too much as India strive for a series sweep and to book their place at this year’s ICC World Test Championship final in June.

"Not at all. I mean, it's straight up, It comes down to performance,” Shastri noted, when asked about how making changes to a winning team may effect chemistry.

“You stick it on the board. This is the performance. It's a tough thing for a coach, I remember I had to do it many times, where you just sit down, and explain to the player, ‘This is what's on the board, what do you think?’

"Sometimes a break for a player in those times is far better, because you can go away, work on his game and come back stronger. I remember in my tenure, in the first Test at England, Pujara was dropped and he came back with hundreds.

“KL Rahul was dropped in Australia in 2019 and came back strongly too."

ICC
 
Australia is a better side than they were in the first 2 Tests. They spooked themselves being obsessed with pitches. Some of these guys play cricket in India for a decade. I expect a much better response from them in the third Test. They just have to get their mind right. They are still a top side. Starc will make some impact.
 
I will be happy if KL Rahul plays in the Middle order where he tends to excel. He is not an opener.

Gill and Rohit will open for sure.
 
I will be happy if KL Rahul plays in the Middle order where he tends to excel. He is not an opener.

Gill and Rohit will open for sure.

I guess Rahul is a reverse version of Rohit! (Rohit who excelled as Opener, while Rahul started all his primary cricket with opening!) Demands of LOI Cricket remodeled them!
 
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