Mercury (Hobart)

Nice to do the job for the team, says Head

- RICHARD EARLE

TRAVIS Head came of age on home soil — defying India with all the “spunk” that has greats including Shane Warne rating the left-hander Australia’s future skipper.

Unbeaten Head (61, 149 balls) showed the match awareness and applicatio­n lacking from experience­d teammates as India reduced Australia to 7-191 at stumps.

Australia faced a devastatin­g first-innings deficit at 4-87 before South Australian Head’s interventi­on.

Head, fronting in his third Test, was the only Australian to register a half-century in reply to India’s 250.

“It’s nice to do the job for the team. That’s all I’m here to do. We hung in there in the end. India bowled exceptiona­lly today. We’ve got a really important hour in the morning. Every run is going to be valuable,” Head said.

There had been calls for Head to be dropped — despite a match-saving 132-run stand on debut with Usman Khawaja against Pakistan in Dubai — given Ravi Ashwin’s hold over left-handers.

It was Head, 24, who looked rock solid against prolific offspinner Ashwin — armed with a comprehens­ive brief from housemate Harry Nielsen who blasted a ton for the Cricket Australia XI last weekend in Sydney.

Australia lacked a sense of strategy and positivity at the crease with the exception of Head, who absorbed the best India’s inspired attack led by Ishant Sharma (2-31), Jasprit Bumrah (2-32) and Ashwin (3-50) could throw at him.

Chesteshwa­r Pujara had rescued India in the opening day and it was Head who stepped up for Australia.

Head stripped back his technique during a county stint with Worcesters­hire in May, learning to temper natural strokeplay with patience and a fortified forward defence. All the work with a range of mentors paid off.

Head’s first 22 runs took 69 balls — showing the fruits of commitment to a “watchful” approach over the past six months.

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