The Citizen (KZN)

India wrap their pacemen up in cotton wool

- Melbourne

– India are treating their pace bowlers like prize-winning thoroughbr­eds after the series-opening win over Australia in Adelaide while cautioning them against straining too hard at the reins when the second match gets underway in Perth.

Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami (right) and Jasprit Bumrah took 14 of the tourists’ 20 wickets at the Adelaide Oval in a fine debut as a pace trio on Australian soil that helped fire the tourists to a 31-run win on Monday.

Former England captain Michael Vaughan wrote on Twitter that India skipper Virat Kohli and his actress wife Anushka Sharma had given up their business class seats to two of the quicks for the 3.5-hour flight from Adelaide to Perth on Tuesday.

Coach Ravi Shastri said all three were spared net duties on Tuesday in a bid to freshen them up before the second Test starts at Perth Stadium on Friday.

“Fast bowlers are a precious commodity and they need to be taken care of, just as you do with a racehorse,” bowling coach Bharat Arun said yesterday.

“And that’s exactly what’s happening.”

Friday’s Test will be the first played at the new Perth Stadium, which has a drop-in pitch and succeeds the Waca as the city’s premier venue for internatio­nals.

Perth Stadium curator Brett Sipthorpe is keen to produce a fast, bouncy wicket that would not be out of place at the Waca.

Arun said India’s bowlers would welcome that prospect following the relatively unhelpful track served up at Adelaide.

“Definitely with a little help from the wicket, obviously the bowlers would love that sort of a wicket,” he said.

“Again, whatever is in the offing, we are happy with it.”

However, he said he would urge his bowlers to stick to the same recipe – consistenc­y and sustained pressure.

“You can be carried away with the extra pace and bounce but again you need to understand that on any responsive track, what is really going to be successful is your consistenc­y,” he said.

While the quicks were akin to racehorses, Arun likened spinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin, who took six wickets and bowled a huge load at Adelaide, to a fine wine.

“Spinners mature a lot with age, maybe they’re like wine,” he said. –

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