India seek historic victory Down Under

Wed, 21 Dec 09:50:00 2011

India have never had a better chance of clinching their first Test series triumph in Australia than over the next month against a host nation in the turmoil of transition.

India's Rahul Dravid raises his bat to celebrate his century on the first day of their second test cricket match against West Indies in Kolkata November 14, 2011. - 0

The series may lack the history of an Ashes encounter, or the volatile edge of India-Pakistan clashes, but it is an intriguing match-up between two proud cricketing nations.

India have never won a series in South Africa either but have tried for longer (since 1947) and more frequently (this will be the 10th series) in Australia.

To India, Australia is the final frontier and for a golden generation of batsmen - Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman - this will be their last chance to conquer it.

The likes of Dravid know better than to fall into discussions of whether the Tests in Melbourne, Sydney, Perth and Adelaide present their best chance.

"We've got to play Melbourne well and take it from there," Dravid said in an ICC podcast this week. "In the past we haven't started well on tours and hopefully we can this time and the momentum will carry us through.

"We'll need consistent performances from a lot of players. We're going to need two or three bowlers to step up and two or three batsmen to step up."

The batsmen should not be a problem.

The three most prolific test batsmen of all time, Tendulkar, Dravid and Ricky Ponting, will be on display in the series and two of them will be playing for India.

Add to that Laxman, who has always excelled against Australia, Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir and young gun Virat Kohli and you have a formidable line-up if, as Adam Gilchrist believes, batting dominates the series.

"The general view is that wickets have tamed somewhat and the Indian players will certainly find ways to score hundreds in those conditions," the former Australian great said recently.

"I wouldn't say there will be dead wickets but maybe not as spicy as it used to be in previous years."

Certainly nothing as spicy as the Hobart greentop which bamboozled both Australian and New Zealand batsmen earlier this month and led to the Black Caps winning a Test across the Tasman Sea for the first time in 26 years.

Australia's collapse on the final day of that match, coming hard and fast on the heels of their skittling for 47 in South Africa in last month, caused another round of soul-searching and the axing of Phil Hughes and Usman Khawaja.

Seven of the 13-man squad for the Boxing Day match, which opens the series at the MCG next Monday, had not played a Test before this year and the most experienced batsman, Ponting, has not scored a Test century for two years.

Former Australia skipper Steve Waugh, who retired at the end of the drawn 2003-4 series against India, still believes the tourists would be wrong to underestimate the task that lies ahead of them.

"We're very difficult to beat in Australia, no matter what team we put out," he said.

"In front of our home crowds, our own conditions. It can be a bit of a hostile environment and our pitches probably suit our bowlers better than any other country."

The emergence of teenager Pat Cummins and 21-year-old James Pattinson as genuine Test pace bowlers in Australia's last three matches had been a great boost to the hosts even if injury has already stalled the former's career.

Quick bowling in Australia can be hard labour at its most intensive and India have already lost two of their preferred pacemen.

Praveen Kumar (fractured rib) and Varun Aaron (back) were ruled out of the tour by injury and replaced by four-test veteran Abhimanyu Mithun and uncapped R Vinay Kumar.

But while there are also concerns about Ishant Sharma's ankle, tall paceman Umesh Yadav impressed against West Indies in his first Test series last month and Zaheer Khan has been rested for four months.

Zaheer's departure from England in August because of ankle and hamstring injuries contributed to the 4-0 drubbing the Indians suffered - a humiliation they would go some way to erasing if they won in Australia.

Tendulkar's quest for his century of international centuries adds another absorbing sub-plot to the series, which both teams hope will avoid the acrimony that marked the 2007-8 India tour.

The allegations of racist name-calling and bad sportmanship in the "Bollyline" or "Monkeygate" row at the Sydney Test marked a low in relations between the two sides.

Dravid, in the annual Donald Bradman Oration in Canberra last week, said he thought a repeat was unlikely.

"Both teams will know that they should have done things a little differently in the Sydney Test," he said.

"We've played each other twice in India already and relations between the two teams are much better than they have been as far as I can remember."

Reuters

Comment 1 - 7 of 7

Sort comments by: Most recent | Most rated
  1. @ 6 Aussies are like a boomarang. You throw them­ away, they keep coming back like a bad smell!! They­ never learn.

    As for the up and coming Test match­ series between India v Auss, if the Indian bowlers can­ fire from all cylinders and the batsman are on the­ ball, I think it will be a great series for India and a­ fine farewell for Rickety Ponting!! I can see the­ days are numbered for the Aussie 'motor­ mouth'!!

    From P, on Thu 22 Dec 12:20AM
  2. dmc, call the English arrogant? That's a bit rich­ coming from just about the most arrogant nation on the­ entire planet. The words "Pot" And­ "Kettle" are two that immediately spring to­ mind.

    And we're leaving the No.1 spot tidy for­ who? Your lot? Helluva leap from No.5, mate.

    From roy, on Wed 21 Dec 10:22PM
  3. Hey dmc Arrogant ? Dont make me laugh you guys ooze­ arrogance and conceit. And as for reclaiming the top­ spot erm you have a long way to climb buddy. All i have­ been doing is giving you some uncomfortable facts. ­ Two Ashes wins home and away, and no 1 in the rankings.­ Whats wrong ? need a bucket?

    From larry.lee, on Wed 21 Dec 8:17PM
  4. No matter how much I hear it, I can't take you guys­ seriously when you're trying to be arrogant about­ your cricket side. It's kinda cute. Make sure­ you give the number 1 spot a quick tidy before you­ leave

    From d M C, on Wed 21 Dec 7:18PM
  5. Yeah dmc you another bitter Aussie living in the­ past. How many times do we have to win the ashes for­ you to admit you are now an inferior team? We have just­ done it back to back, and we are no 1 in the world­ rankings. Yes makes you sick to your guts does.nt­ it. Still for now you have more pressing matters.­ Such as avoiding humiliation against India, and with­ your selectors that is going to be difficult now

    From larry.lee, on Wed 21 Dec 4:25PM
  6. Yeah Larry, that one series win in 23 years that­ England had in Australia is a testament to how hard the­ poms have been to beat in Australia

    From d M C, on Wed 21 Dec 3:09PM
  7. Steve Waugh says " We,re very difficult to beat­ in Australia " he forgot the " except­ against England " on the end of it

    From larry.lee, on Wed 21 Dec 12:57PM
Sort comments by: Most recent | Most rated

Not already a Yahoo! user ? to get a free Yahoo! Account