Aus v SA: Smith ready to prove Proteas wrong

Australia's captain Steve Smith is relishing the opportunity to prove South Africa's 'snake' theory wrong in the opening Test against the Proteas. The three-Test series gets underway in Perth on Thursday.

Published : Nov 02, 2016 15:33 IST

Steve Smith and Faf du Plessis pose with the Test series trophy ahead of the series.
Steve Smith and Faf du Plessis pose with the Test series trophy ahead of the series.
lightbox-info

Steve Smith and Faf du Plessis pose with the Test series trophy ahead of the series.

Australia captain Steve Smith is relishing the opportunity to prove South Africa's 'snake' theory wrong in the opening Test against the Proteas. The three-Test series gets underway in Perth on Thursday, with South Africa public in its plan to target Smith and Australia's supposedly vulnerable batsmen.

> Read: Siddle picked for opening Test against South Africa

Heading into the WACA opener, Proteas paceman Dale Steyn said: "If you can cut off the head of the snake, the rest of the body tends to fall ... he [Smith] is the leader and if we can cause a bit of chaos there, sometimes it does affect the rest."

> Read: Warner brushes off Steyn's 'fast bowler talk'

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Smith is happy to be a target for the touring South Africans. "We've got a lot of batters in our line-up that are capable of scoring big runs," Smith said. "They can think that way if they like. Hopefully they get rid of me and just start to think the rest is going to happen.

> Preview: Wounded Starc leads Aussie hopes against Proteas

"That'd be nice - and hopefully our guys can cash in ... but yeah, interesting theory."

Hoping for pace and bounce

Smith was speaking as veteran quick Peter Siddle received the nod ahead of uncapped Test paceman Joe Mennie for the Perth showdown.Siddle will team up with Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood in Australia's pace attack, and Smith is hoping for a bouncy WACA wicket.

"It's obviously got another day in the sun today and we'll have another look in the morning," Smith said. "I'd like to see it a lot quicker and bouncier than last year, that’s for sure. I thought that played very slow and benign so hopefully a lot more pace and bounce, but we'll wait and see in the morning.

"There's still a bit of grass on it, I think he might take a little bit of that off. When you look at the WACA wicket I guess you want to see that sheen and when it's like that it generally goes through. That's what we want to see from a WACA wicket, nice and fast and bouncy."

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment