Pakistan and India will trouble Australia – but not their spinners

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Spinners were the looming threat the last time Australia played Tests against Pakistan and India. But over the coming months, the Aussie batsmen will be challenged by the teams’ vastly improved pace attacks.

In about six weeks, Australia will travel to the UAE for a two-Test series against Pakistan, whose impressive fast bowlers helped them to a 1-1 draw in England recently.

Meanwhile, India will land in Australia this summer for a four-Test series boasting their best-ever pace unit, one which has held its own in both England and South Africa this year.

Australia have gaping holes in their batting line-up due to the lengthy bans handed to Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft for their roles in the ball-tampering scandal.

New Australian coach Justin Langer has indicated batting selections for the Tests against Pakistan will be heavily influenced by performances on the current Australia A tour of India. Test incumbents Usman Khawaja, Peter Handscomb and Matt Renshaw will play in Australia A’s two first-class matches against India A, while the likes of Travis Head and Kurtis Patterson will also have a chance to press their cases.

Clearly, Langer and his fellow selectors want to see how those batsmen handle the challenge of playing talented Indian spinners on what are likely to be turning tracks. But the Australian batsmen who are picked to play Pakistan will have a lot more to contend with than just quality spinners.

In left-arm wildcard Mohammad Amir and probing right-arm seamer Mohammad Abbas, Pakistan have a well-balanced new ball pair. Amir and Abbas combined to take 31 wickets at 15 on Pakistan’s Test tour of Europe, and Abbas now has the amazing record of 42 wickets at 17 from his eight career Tests.

Amir is well known to the Australians, having turned in several searing performances against them across all formats.

Pakistan’s Mohammad Amir (AP Photo/Tertius Pickard)

Abbas, however, shapes as potentially an even bigger weapon against a green Australian top order.

He reminds me of prodigiously-gifted Pakistan seamer Mohammad Asif, who took 106 wickets at 24 in Tests and looked set to dominate the format before being banned for spot fixing.

Just like Asif, Abbas is not quick but makes up for it by suffocating batsmen with his rare accuracy. Abbas lands delivery after delivery on a testing line and length, moving the ball just enough through the air or off the pitch to trouble batsmen. In this way, he is also similar to South African Vernon Philander, who has taken 53 wickets at 24 against Australia in Tests.

Abbas and Amir will have strong support in the form of young-gun quick Hasan Ali. Ranked the third-best ODI bowler in the world, having grabbed 68 wickets at 21 in that format, Hasan has made a fine start to his Test career, with 12 wickets at 29 from his first four matches.

Australia will likely be more concerned about the threat posed by Pakistani’s spinners, given that the home tweakers took 30 wickets at 23 the last time the Aussies toured the UAE. But Abbas, Amir and Hasan will harrass them with both the new and old ball, ensuring this series will be a massive challenge for Australia’s weakened line-up.

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Soon after that, India will come Down Under with comfortably the most potent Test pace attack I’ve ever seen them possess.

India now have not just quality but also good depth in their pace stocks. Across five Tests in England and South Africa this year, India have used five specialist quicks who together have taken 76 wickets at 23.

Giving them greater depth is batting all-rounder Hardik Pandya, who has taken 12 wickets at 27 across those five Tests, and this week tore England apart with a first innings haul of 5-28.

Granted, India’s quicks have operated in much more helpful conditions during those two series than they’ll receive in Australia. But anyone who’s watched them in England and South Africa would be impressed by them.

Veteran Ishant Sharma has improved dramatically over the past two years, perhaps helped by a stint in English county cricket, where he was mentored by Australian pace legend Jason Gillespie at Sussex.

Swing bowler Mohammad Shami has been patchier than Ishant this year but did well last time India toured Australia, taking 15 wickets at 35 in a series played on absolute roads.

Skiddy quick Umesh Yadav, meanwhile, was outstanding against Australia in India last year, taking 17 wickets at 23 and troubling the Aussie batsmen with reverse swing.

Then there’s swing merchant Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who is building a fine Test record, with 63 wickets at 26.

Finally, the man who could be best suited to Australian conditions of all of the Indian quicks is prodigy Jasprit Bumrah.

The world’s number one ranked ODI bowler, Bumrah is genuinely sharp, having been clocked at up to 150kmh. Despite not being tall, Bumrah earns good lift and confuses batsmen with his quirky action and the wide angle from he often delivers the ball. He produced a sensational spell with the second new ball in England’s second innings this week, tying English superstar Joe Root in knots and finishing with a five-wicket haul.

India’s quicks may have been cannon fodder on recent tours to Australia but there’s strong reason to believe they will be much more dangerous this summer.

The same goes for Pakistan’s pace unit in the upcoming Tests in the UAE.

The Crowd Says:

2018-08-28T07:28:37+00:00

Brian

Guest


From what I understand Shami & Kumar swing the ball so fine in England, not much use here. Yadav, Bumrah & Sharma are interesting because they could potentially bowl quick. I remember a spell Sharma bowled to Ponitng around 2009 I think at the WACA. It was the best spell I have ever seen from an Indian quick and yet so many times since he was poor so who knows. I'd still rather have the Aussie attack in our conditions but the batting is so weak. It was weak before Warner and Smith were removed so the series should be tight. People said England were terrible but without Smith they probably win the 1st Test at the GABBA so India have every right to come here confident with a batting lineup far superiour to England's

2018-08-25T11:38:49+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Good win in the end.

AUTHOR

2018-08-25T07:43:45+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Australia A have just scored 5 for 322 against South Africa A, which should be a very good score in Bangalore. Head continued his good 50-over form with 110, while Labuschagne chipped in with 65, Short 49 and then the innings ended with a bang thanks to Renshaw (42no from 29) and Agar (17no from 4). Australia is playing a new-look attack today with Paris, Wildermuth and Tremain all into the team replacing Richardson, Stanlake and Neser.

2018-08-23T09:57:55+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Rayudu did well to get them home it seems

2018-08-23T09:27:21+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Guest


Don't panic

2018-08-23T08:19:55+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


I would guess it is two paced and slow.

AUTHOR

2018-08-23T07:59:15+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Now Agar has a wicket first ball and India are 4 for 29! And it's the big wicket of Shreyas Iyer, the young star from Mumbai.

AUTHOR

2018-08-23T07:49:52+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Stanlake 6 overs 0-11 now. There must be a bit in the deck because both sides have good batting lineups yet have really struggled.

2018-08-23T07:12:55+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Stanlake has 0/9 off 5 and Richardson has 3/15 off 5. They have put in a great effort. Love to know what the deck is like.

AUTHOR

2018-08-23T07:05:55+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Jhye Richardson has 3 for 15. He is a serious talent, still only 21 years old. I think all the exposure he's had for Australia and now Australia A this year could really push him to have a massive domestic summer in all formats.

AUTHOR

2018-08-23T06:59:34+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Nice piece Anindya, there's certainly a lot of excitement in India about the quicks that emerged from the last u19 World Cup. Shivam Mavi was very impressive at times in the IPL, very confident and nudged 150kmh a few times.

2018-08-23T06:53:40+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


Goodness soo many left handers!

2018-08-23T06:44:34+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Richardson has stepped up and put us back in the game, 3/22

2018-08-23T06:08:14+00:00

I no

Guest


All out 151 the whole score card Short (15.12) Khawaja (13.18) Head (28.38) Hanscomb (2.9) Renshaw (7.16) Carey (7.10) pace dismissed Agar (34.40) Neser (16.18) J Richardson (1.4) Swepson (15.20) Stanlake (2.5) not out

2018-08-23T05:45:53+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


The the thing is 140 wasn't considered fast when McGrath came it. And not long after him we got Dizzy and Brett Lee so he seemed even slower than he really was. By today's standards if he came in and bowled 140 everyone would be talking about how fast he is.

2018-08-23T05:41:52+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


8/115 Looking....not good

2018-08-23T05:03:28+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


Don't worry about the cricket Peter, we could use a Prime Minister with those qualities at the moment!

2018-08-23T05:01:12+00:00

I no

Guest


Renshaw (7.16) out to spin tried to sweep and completely missed the arm ball lbw. Australia 5 for 76 after 17 overs.

2018-08-23T04:52:47+00:00

I no

Guest


Head (28.38) danced down the wicket to the spiner and tried to whip a full one and straight bowled him.

2018-08-23T04:52:25+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


I'm a gritty left hander who modeled himself on Allan Border. Getting on a bit though.

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