Arab Times

Aussies reduced to hit, hope without stars Smith & Warner

Finding replacemen­ts thankless task

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MELBOURNE, Dec 3, (RTRS): The sight of Steve Smith and David Warner facing a pace barrage in a nets session last week may have been bitterswee­t for fans of Australian cricket nursing grave concerns about the nation’s batting ahead of the upcoming India Test series.

Taking guard against the team’s frontline quicks, Smith and Warner’s easy reunion with their old cohort will have eased some fears that the duo might struggle to reintegrat­e after their long bans for ball-tampering expire at the end of March.

Little can be done in the short term, however, and former captain Smith and his vice captain Warner’s absence will be felt keenly around the country’s stadiums Warner averages 49.50 against India at home with four centuries in eight matches.

Smith’s batting reached another level after succeeding Michael Clarke as captain in 2015. He notched his 23rd Test century against England at last year’s Boxing Day Test in Melbourne.

Smith has averaged 84.05 against India and a whopping 128.16 on home pitches, including a century in each of the four Tests of the last 2014/15 series.

Virat Kohli’s India will be thrilled they can play no part in the four-Test series starting in Adelaide on Thursday.

Finding replacemen­ts for the duo has been a thankless task for selectors, who were hoping candidates would be banging down their doors with a slew of runs in the Sheffield Shield.

The 14-man squad announced two weeks ago was dismissed by local media as the worst collection of Australian batsmen in history.

For the first home summer in decades, Australia will not be led by a runmachine in the mould of Smith, Clarke or Ricky Ponting but by wicket-keeper Tim Paine, who has played only 15 previous Tests.

Paine’s average of 38.25 is nonetheles­s superior to preferred all-rounder and likely number six Mitchell Marsh, named one of Australia’s two vicecaptai­ns in September despite averaging 26.08 with the bat in his 30 Tests.

The problems begin at the top, however, where one-day specialist Aaron Finch will line up for just his third Test after debuting in the 1-0 series defeat to Pakistan in October.

At the other end will be a rookie in Marcus Harris, the uncapped left-hander seemingly picked on the strength of an unbeaten 250 for Victoria in October rather than for his career first class average of 35.49.

The lottery continues with 35-yearold number four Shaun Marsh, whose last 10 innings away to Pakistan and South Africa have featured a top score of 26.

The number five slot will be a tossup between Peter Handscomb, who was dropped for the Pakistan Tests, and twoTest left-hander Travis Head, whose high regard from selectors outstrips his humble numbers in Shield cricket.

For a nation that once boasted a batting production line the envy of the world, Australia’s reduced circumstan­ces are almost unfathomab­le for past generation­s.

“Smith and Warner are the only two (batsmen) capable of playing 100 Tests ability-wise,” said former test wicketkeep­er and selector Rod Marsh.

“That didn’t used to be the case.” the four-test series Down Under, something the previous Indian teams could not manage in 11 previous attempts.

In Mohammed Shami, the tourists have got a quick who can move the ball both new and old. It was hardly a surprise that the Indian board limited his workload to 15-overs-per-innings in the domestic Ranji Trophy prior to the series in Australia. Among others, Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar’s prodigious swing, Umesh Yadav’s consistent pace and Ishant Sharma’s extra bounce make them real assets.

Cherry on top is Jasprit Bumrah, whose sling-arm action and awkward release point along with his ability to bowl yorkers almost at will adds an X-factor to the unit.

When coach Ravi Shastri was asked in August if this was the best Indian attack ever, the former test player gushed, “By a mile, by a mile. No (other India) team comes even close.” South Africa captain Faf du Plessis concurred, having had a first-hand experience against them earlier this year when his team prevailed 2-1 in an intense home series.

“... for the first time, they’ve got three or four seamers in their squad that can bowl 140 (kph)plus and are very good bowlers,” du Plessis told www.cricket.com. au recently.

“Obviously when you come to conditions like South Africa, Australia, England, you need pace bowlers and in the past they might have had one or two, but now they’ve got three or four.

“And when they travelled in South Africa (earlier this year),

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