Australia face a nightmare tour of India

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Australia will be missing half of their best ODI line-up next week when they start what looms as a nightmare limited-overs tour of India.

Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Steve Smith, David Warner and Shaun Marsh are all automatic picks for Australia in ODIs when available but none will be on the park when this crucial five-match series starts in India.

The tour starts 12 days from now with the first of two T20Is followed by what will be Australia’s second-last ODI series before the World Cup, with their final series to be played against Pakistan in the UAE next month.

As they have been for many years now, India are a commanding unit in ODIs, blessed with an incredible top order, a sturdy middle order, quality quicks and the world’s best spin attack.

Even if Australia were at full strength, India would still be heavy favourites in their home conditions. India have won 18 of their last 20 ODI series at home, with their only losses in that time being to South Africa in 2015 and Pakistan in 2012.

Australia are fresh from a 2-1 loss to India in a home ODI series and the last time they toured India, some 18 months ago, they were hammered 4-1 despite missing only Starc from their best XI in that series.

This all sounds rather depressing, doesn’t it? Particularly given that, with only about a dozen matches left before the World Cup, Australia are in need of building momentum.

On the plus side for Australia, a series this tough should help them separate the wheat from the chaff in the lead up to that tournament. The Australian players will face no greater challenges in the World Cup than those to be levelled at them in India. Playing India in India remains the fiercest task in all three formats.

The Aussies who are able to thrive in these circumstances can then be backed to handle the pressure of the World Cup. Meanwhile, those who wilt can either be cast aside for the tour of the UAE or placed on final notice.

In Australia’s squad for India the likes of Ashton Turner, Jason Behrendorff, D’Arcy Short and Jhye Richardson are ODI greenhorns who should learn a huge amount from this series.

D’Arcy Short. (Giuseppe Cacace/AFP/Getty Images)

Turner will be making his ODI debut if he gets a game, while quick Behrendorff (two ODIs), batsman Short (four) and swing bowler Richardson (seven) are still trying to establish themselves at international level.

Richardson, Short and Behrendorff have earnt their spots with impressive performances in domestic 50-over cricket, but Turner is a speculative pick.

The 26-year-old batsman from Western Australia made a great start to his List A career before stagnating in one-day cricket, having scored just a single half-century in the past four years.

Turner instead has been picked on the back of his good T20 form, having made 630 runs at 31 over the past two Big Bash League seasons. He is also a good fieldsman and a handy off spinner, although he rarely bowls these days after entering the domestic system as a bowling all-rounder.

Australia’s ODI performances have been so rank over the past two years that any of these aforementioned rookies could easily seal a World Cup spot by shining in India.

Then there’s a host of fringe players, guys who have featured in a number of ODI series yet have never nailed down a spot in the Aussie side. These include spinners Nathan Lyon and Adam Zampa, quicks Kane Richardson and Nathan Coulter-Nile, and batsmen Peter Handscomb and Usman Khawaja.

All of those six players will be playing for World Cup spots in India.

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The only members of Australia’s squad to tour India who are assured or are at least very likely to feature in that tournament are ODI captain Aaron Finch, wicketkeeper Alex Carey, veteran batsman Shaun Marsh, express quick Pat Cummins and dynamic all-rounders Glenn Maxwell and Marcus Stoinis.

That leaves a hell of a lot of World Cup positions up for grabs in India and the UAE. The Aussie bowlers will face the fearful task of bowling to probably the greatest top order ODIs have ever seen in Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan and Virat Kohli.

The visiting batsmen will face the world’s best ODI quick Jasprit Bumrah and the befuddling spin combo of Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal. ODI cricket does not get tougher.

It could turn out to be just the trial by fire Australia need in the lead up to the World Cup. Or it could be a dumpster fire of a tour which leaves them in a mess just months out from defending that trophy.

The Crowd Says:

2019-02-15T01:24:47+00:00

peter chrisp

Guest


Huge thanks James appreciative

2019-02-13T23:23:08+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It was strange. Still, it's now up to him to knock the door down again and for Zampa and Lyon to keep him out. I think white ball cricket doesn't really suit Lyon but I think the selection panel are just giving him his fair go to see if he can make that a goer too. If the GOAT comes off, it's a bonus.

2019-02-13T23:03:09+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


The first of two T20s kicks off at 12:30am Monday 25th Feb (i.e. Sunday night) AEDT. The first ODI stats at 7pm on 2 March. https://www.google.com/search?safe=strict&rlz=1C1GGRV_enAU751AU751&q=australia+tour+of+india+2019+schedule&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjojZSD6LngAhUEXCsKHbymBVsQ1QIoAHoECAUQAQ&biw=1920&bih=1035

2019-02-13T22:59:38+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


I'd like to think that's the only reason Agar was omitted, Don. But the selectors showed an alarming lack of faith in Agar this summer, despite his promising performances in T20Is and ODIs over the preceding 8 months or so. He looked on track to be an important part of the WC plans and now he's in limbo. Bizarre.

2019-02-13T12:34:35+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


Fifty-over ODIs really are an anachronism, in the age of T20s. I think they should be phased out.

2019-02-13T09:56:38+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It can only be that his broken finger is still trouble. He provides so much in all 3 disciplines.

2019-02-13T09:22:47+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He might feel differently about his keeping now that others have gone past him in the Test pecking order. This might be his representative niche now...although, Carey is unlikely to loosen his grip. He's pretty good.

2019-02-13T08:51:15+00:00

AB13

Guest


"The Aussie bowlers will face the fearful task of bowling to probably the greatest top order ODIs have ever seen in Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan and Virat Kohli." Hayden, Gilchrist, Ponting, Martyn, Hussey easily gives them a run for their money.

AUTHOR

2019-02-13T08:50:09+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Leaving Agar out of this series was a major mistake. Australia have a very good idea of who their best 4-5 ODI quicks are whereas its unclear which spinners they should pick for the World Cup. So Australia should have picked 3 spinners (Zampa, Agar and Lyon) in the squad and played 2 spinners in each match in India - that way they could have given one of those spinners 4 matches in the series and 3 matches each to the other two. Based on how they went they then could have honed their spin selections for the 5-match ODI series in the UAE, and by the end of that series their spin situation would surely be much clearer.

AUTHOR

2019-02-13T08:44:21+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"Handscomb is no longer a keeper (on his insistence)." Yet he has kept this whole BBL season and done a good job with the gloves. Handscomb also has more than 900 runs at 50 in the List A matches where he's played as a keeper so he knows that he can balance keeping and making runs. I'd bet if he was offered the chance he would leap at the opportunity to be Australia's ODI keeper. Keepers in Australian sides are normally given nice long stints in the side, they have to be really struggling to get dropped, so it would be a great career move for him. Regardless, this is all academic as I think Carey is certain to keep at the World Cup, my gut tells me the selectors have locked him in for the long haul.

2019-02-13T07:31:41+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


No…it is the birth of his baby. He must be over the hamstring niggle because he has been named to play with Fremantle this weekend.

2019-02-13T07:30:39+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The most 'astounding' thing, Joey, is the idea that Wade and Handscomb are competent international keepers. Carey did better than Wade with the bat in JLT ODD this season. Handscomb is no longer a keeper (on his insistence).

2019-02-13T07:26:52+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Finch...sigh...that's a potential issue.

2019-02-13T07:23:31+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It's worth the $25 Kayo. At least, I hope they come to the party...I think it is an Indian affair. I'll be watching somehow...unless there's a Freo game on.

2019-02-13T07:21:59+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'm expecting the boys to grow a leg in this series. It has been a promising trend post-sandpaper. Turner is such a good batsman and a great cricket mind but his shoulder not only precludes him from bowling, it has him relaying underarm to a second fieldsman when on the boundary. Hopefully that's improving, but he was delaying surgery, hoping they'd pick him as a batsman. Maybe he'll be fine.

2019-02-13T05:34:44+00:00

peter chrisp

Guest


Paul & James H I noticed on the site not many are supporting this "lightning" tour of India, and judging by what Ronan has suggested we have very little chance after our defeats in the recent tour of Australia. No doubt it will be difficult especially on their own home soil. I must admit i am looking forward to it. Does anyone know the actual time it starts, Aussie time?

2019-02-13T05:01:02+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


Another meaningless ODI series to go with the equally meaningless ODI series in SA at the start of the season. If we must play these games, send over a development squad.

AUTHOR

2019-02-12T23:27:50+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


And Philippe isn't even the best keeper-batsman in his State, Inglis is well ahead of him at this stage as would Whiteman be if he could stay healthy.

2019-02-12T22:55:36+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Just in case you're actually serious... Current player ODI batting rankings: Rohit - 2 Dhawan - 10 Kohli - 1 Roy - 23 Bairstow - 12 Root - 4 Current player ODI bowling rankings: Kuldeep - 4 Chahal - 5 Rashid - 8 Moeen - 22

2019-02-12T22:50:04+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Definitely. Paine still has at least another 12 months left in him in tests and we have Handscomb or Wade in white ball cricket should the selectors decide to drop Carey. Rushing a rookie keeper into the squad just before a World Cup would be nuts.

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