The Cairns Post

Pujara perfect example of stance needed

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It took Pujara (521) only four matches to almost outscore Khawaja (592) as well in perhaps the most damning explanatio­n for how dire the state of Australian batting really is.

Kohli has provided the blueprint, but the execution will be up to Australia’s battling stars and the wisdom of an under-fire selection panel.

“If you go out there with any ego you might as well not go at all,” warned Kohli.

“Because that Dukes ball, it buries egos pretty quickly.

“You have to curb yourself down and just do the hard yards. Grind it out the whole day and you have to be patient as a batsman.

“There’s a lot of time in Test cricket.

“Because we’re so nervous as batsmen we don’t quite realise it.

“You just want to get away quickly but in England you’re not allowed to do that.

“You have to buy your time, and you have to earn the right to score runs eventually.

“But you have to get into a position where you should not even look at the scoreboard or at the number of balls. It’s inconseque­ntial – patience is the only thing that works there and putting runs on the board again is the most important thing to win Test matches. “… It’s just mindset.” India whipped up a celebrator­y dance in front of their hearty group of spectators who outlasted the washed-out final day at the SCG, but not even then would marathon man Pujara cut loose.

Australia must find dogged

fighters in Pujara’s own image who aren’t worried about appearance­s, only balls faced and time in the middle.

Selectors are reluctant to sack Shaun Marsh because he is an experience­d player in a greenhorn group, and he is a man who can produce Test hundreds when he’s on.

But the stark reality is he has scored just 344 runs in 10 matches without a hundred at a dismal average of 18. Paine said it was unfair to single Marsh out with Khawaja the solitary century maker in a year of Test cricket.

“I don’t think it was just those two (Marsh and Khawaja), I think everyone in our top seven didn’t play as well as we would have liked,” said Paine.

“I thought Marcus Harris and Travis Head, Travis was our leading run-scorer and Marcus showed in most innings that he could make it at this level.

“We’ve got some positives there. The rest of us didn’t score enough runs, so to put that on Uzzie and Shaun is probably a little bit harsh.

“Both of those players we know are absolute class, we know they can score a lot of runs. We have faith in them going forward.”

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 ??  ?? ADVICE: Indian captain Virat Kohli and his team celebrate at the SCG winning the Border-Gavaskar trophy after defeating Australia in the 2018/19 series.
ADVICE: Indian captain Virat Kohli and his team celebrate at the SCG winning the Border-Gavaskar trophy after defeating Australia in the 2018/19 series.

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