India cannot expect an easy outing

Chance for its beleaguered bowlers to begin afresh but Australia will not give an inch

January 20, 2016 03:30 am | Updated November 17, 2021 03:10 am IST - Canberra:

Indian batsmen bat in the nets during training in Canberra, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016. India will play Australia in their One Day International cricket match on Wednesday, Jan 20.

Indian batsmen bat in the nets during training in Canberra, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016. India will play Australia in their One Day International cricket match on Wednesday, Jan 20.

The Manuka Oval is a quiet place but so is all of Canberra. Here in the middle of Australia’s leafy National capital, India will look for relief from a week of noisy despair. The VB Series is lost, but the two dead rubbers, beginning with the fourth ODI here on Wednesday, give India the opportunity to play with a little freedom.

It is a chance for the team and its beleaguered bowlers to begin afresh. It is also a chance to experiment — although that was perhaps the point of the series, which had little context in the larger scheme of things — without fretting over the result.

India’s decision to drop R. Ashwin for Rishi Dhawan in Melbourne would not have been an easy one to make. It was, in M.S. Dhoni’s opinion, the only way he could field another seam bowler without weakening the batting.

Great one-day wicket

Australia off-spinner Nathan Lyon, who was a member of the ground-staff here seven years ago and knows the pitch as well as anyone else, said on Monday that it was going to be “a great wicket for one-day cricket.” It will thus be interesting to note whether Ashwin comes back in, on a surface that is expected to be flat without taking much turn.

Ashwin bowled non-stop for nearly two hours in the nets on Tuesday, along with Axar Patel. The Gujarat all-rounder played three games in the triangular series here last year, without making much of an impression, positive or negative. He was then part of India’s squad during the World Cup but did not play a single game. It would be pointless to have brought him this far this time only to carry the drinks.

Meanwhile, Barinder Sran did not bowl until near the end of India’s training session. The left-armer went for 63 runs from his eight overs at the MCG and could well sit this one out in place of Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Ishant Sharma and Umesh Yadav need to bowl better than they have in the previous two matches. India has no ready replacements for bowlers of their experience.

Australia, for its part, will welcome David Warner, back from the birth of his second child, into the team again. It will give the home side a selection headache, for Shaun Marsh has scored half-centuries in his two previous innings. Glenn Maxwell, Lyon and Warner have all spoken of winning the series 5-0 and not giving an inch. India cannot expect an easy outing.

The teams (from):

India: M.S. Dhoni (capt.), Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane, Manish Pandey, Gurkeerat Mann, Ravindra Jadeja, R. Ashwin, Rishi Dhawan, Ishant Sharma, Umesh Yadav, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Barinder Sran, and Axar Patel.

Australia: Steve Smith (capt.), Aaron Finch, David Warner, George Bailey, Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Marsh, Matthew Wade, James Faulkner, John Hastings, Scott Boland, Kane Richardson, Nathan Lyon and Shaun Marsh.

Umpires: Richard Kettleborough and John Ward. Match referee: Jeff Crowe. Start of play: 8:50 a.m. IST.

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