
India vs Australia second Test preview: Intriguing pink-ball battle on the cards as hosts look to get even
The Hindu
Preview of the exciting day-and-night Border Gavaskar Trophy Test match between India and Australia at Adelaide Oval starting December 6, 2024
Blazing sunshine and dry heat prevailed for a large part of Thursday (December 5, 2024) before the clouds made a fleeting appearance over the Adelaide Oval. The air was still and through the public-address system, the national anthems of India and Australia were played as part of the preparations for the day-and-night second Test that will commence here on Friday (December 5, 2024) afternoon.
There is a forecast for the odd thunder-shower on the opening day, a disruption that may not have a major effect. India leads 1-0 in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series, an advantage that Rohit Sharma’s men want to build upon at a venue which offers mixed signals from the past.
Sunil Gavaskar, Sandeep Patil, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Virender Sehwag, Ajit Agarkar and Virat Kohli, have been heroes in Adelaide at varying points. Hundreds, wickets and triumphs in the 2003 and 2018 games add to the halo before the 36 registered in the 2020 pink-ball Test offers a grim reality check.
In the lead-up to the latest contest, there have been exhaustive discussions about how the pink ball would move under lights and the tricky phase of dealing with twilight. India has won three of its four day-and-night Tests and all those triumphs were scripted in home conditions. Having lost the lone overseas encounter here in 2020, the visitors get a chance to make amends.
It helps that a full-strength playing eleven is on the cards with Rohit and Shubman Gill slotting themselves back. The former also put to rest all the speculation over his batting position by clearly stating that K.L. Rahul will open along with Yashasvi Jaiswal. The Indian captain said that the duo played well atop the order at Perth and in the team’s interest it is better he himself plays in the middle order.
Whether India steps in without R. Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja, like it did at Perth, remains to be seen. Kohli’s unbeaten 100 in the first Test, the manner in which Jasprit Bumrah has occupied head-space among all Aussie batters, and the performance of the two debutants Harshit Rana and Nitish Kumar, are all handy psychological brownie points.
Meanwhile, Australia at home tends to be dominant even if India has punctured this perception through series victories over the previous two tours. Pat Cummins and his men are keen to win and the Australian skipper said: “We had a long break after the first Test and now this second Test seems like a first Test for us.”