Discussing the upcoming 2024-25 Border Gavaskar Trophy, Australia great Matthew Hayden here said that the Australian team is in a transition period and vulnerable at the top, with the need for a new opening batter to replace David Warner.
âWell, itâs a time in Australian cricket where itâs a transition period. And so, weâre vulnerable at the top. I was very forthright in saying this, Steve Smith should never have been the opening batter for Australia. And I still believe thatâs the case.
âSo, we are on the lookout for, I believe, another opening batter to replace the great David Warner, whoâs had an exceptional career. He really, I feel, built on the legacy that JL (Justin Langer) and I created in our period. He went better. Whereas our strike rate was 65 to 70, Dave Warner was 80 and sometimes more,â he said during the panel discussion on the India-Australia cricket with the legendary Sunil Gavaskar and former India off-spinner Harbhajan Singh at the launch of the Australia-India âSummer of Cricket,â organised by the Australian Consulate in partnership with Cricket Australia (CA) and the Centre for Australia-India Relations.
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âItâs really a battle of the top order. And Australian cricket has put itself in a position where itâs kind of got no further games to really anticipate what itâs going to look like ahead of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. So, thatâs the only question mark. If I were to do a SWOT analysis on us as a group, that would be my only question mark,â he added.
India is set to play five Tests at the Perth Stadium, Adelaide Oval, Gabba, Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), and Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) from November 22 to January 7.
âIâve played in three-match series and thatâs not enough. Fourâs an awkward number. You canât get your teeth into it. But five has just got it all on the line.
âYou can get behind in the series. You can come back in the series. And thatâs why the Ashes, which has now been reduced to five or six, is still a great series. Because it sways in roundabouts. And you have to be up for it because itâs a long tour,â said Hayden.
Asked for his wish list for the series, Gavaskar said: âMy wish list is, obviously, India should continue to be winning us three in Australia – twice theyâve won now, and so for the third time as well.
âHope itâs a good, close series with the matches going into the fifth day. A lot of Test matches finish in three-and-a-half, four days. A five-day Test would be fantastic for everybody concerned. I just hope that happens because that means that it wonât be one-sided. It will mean that the balance of power will move from day one to day two.
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âTest matches in the earlier days used to be like an Indian soap. So, on the first day, the mother-in-law is the boss; on the second day, the daughter-in-law is the boss, and on the third day, the mother-in-law is the boss. Thatâs what happens in Indian TV serials. Something like that you want to see, where Australia and India keep on dominating for four days alternately, and maybe on the fifth day the team that has really got that greater desire goes out and wins. That would be, obviously, the wish list, and all five Test matches should have a result. That would be absolutely fantastic. In the 1977 India-Australia series, Australia won 3-2. You just want that kind of a situation where you have a result in every game.
âOn an individual level, maybe for Virat Kohli, whoâs got four centuries on four different venues, that he becomes the third overseas player whoâs scored a century in all the Australian venues. I think he doesnât have one at the Gabba. I think heâs got it everywhere else. So if he gets a century at the Gabba, that means he joins me and Alastair Cook as the third overseas batter to have got a century at all the Australian venues. That would be fantastic. Because, if he gets runs, India will get a lot of runs as well.â
When asked for his prediction for the series, Hayden said: âJust to sum this up, Iâll paint out what itâs going to look like. Australia is gonna win the first Test in Perth. So, drop-in wicket, but itâs about 12 mm grass that your (Indian) top-order can look forward to; 12mm of very bright green grass. (Josh) Hazlewood, (Pat) Cummins, and (Mitchell) Starc will bother you with pace. And for (Nathan) Lyon, I guess, the ball will really bounce there as well.
âCome across to Adelaide, Kuldeep will turn it. Itâs a drop-in wicket as well. It also starts a little grassy, but what tends to happen is it tends to get footmarks and so youâll win that game.
âAnd then, youâll come across to Brisbane and Australia will win that Test match, because itâs just one of those venues which is classically in favour of us.
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âSo, now youâve come to Melbourne, and India comes back hard. You saw the passion and the rivalry at that (2020) Test match. That venue is home to well over 700,000 expats. Thatâll be Australiaâs away game. Itâs the only away game that Australia will actually play.
âSo, now youâre 2-all up, then you go to Sydney and thatâs when eyeballs start to meet and rivalry starts to happen. Because everyoneâs tight. Conditions not being drop-in, they start to then become fierce. Whoever starts that Test match really well, will find it hard to also lose the Test
match because once you get into day three, day four, and in particular day five, itâs a batting graveyard. It becomes really hard to score. Sometimes, itâs tricky in the middle couple of days, but often itâs very hard to score.
âSo, Iâm going to just leave it 2-all, and Iâm going to hedge my bets into that fifth Test match because I canât wait to see that one. Thatâs my favourite Test match when India tours Australia because it does turn and the wicket becomes a little tricky to bat on as well.â
Source Agencies