IND A v AUS: Dual objective for India hopefuls

As much as the warm-up game is an opportunity for the young turks like Ishan Kishan, Rishabh Pant and Mohammed Siraj to knock on the selectors’ door, the game will also present Pandya to enhance his reputation as a longer-version cricketer.

Published : Feb 16, 2017 19:50 IST , Mumbai

India A Hardik Pandya takes a look at the pitch at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai on Thursday
India A Hardik Pandya takes a look at the pitch at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai on Thursday
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India A Hardik Pandya takes a look at the pitch at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai on Thursday

Australia. Warm-up match. Brabourne Stadium.

A mere mention is enough to turn the clock back to 1998, when Sachin Tendulkar’s Mumbai decimated the Australians in the tour game, and Mark Taylor’s team could never really recover from the early blow for the rest of the tour.

Well, the India A outfit, that will take on the Australians in a three-day game from Friday, may not be as strong as that Mumbai team 19 years ago, but Hardik Pandya—the lone member of India’s Test squad, who would be leading any team for the first time in his career—is hoping he and his teammates would achieve a dual objective over the next three days.

“This is a great opportunity for everyone in the team to show what they are capable of. This is an opportunity to do something amazing that will send across a good impression to the selectors and come on their radar,” Pandya said after India A’s training session on Thursday afternoon.

“If the visiting team is unable to do well against an A team, it always creates doubts in their mind whether they can do well against the main team. Everyone in this team has scored enough runs or taken enough wickets to be part of this A team. Australia is an experienced team and I am hoping this to be a very competitive game.”

As much as it is an opportunity for the young turks like Ishan Kishan, Rishabh Pant and Mohammed Siraj to knock on the selectors’ door, the game will also present Pandya to enhance his reputation as a longer-version cricketer. On the back of his impressive outing in the limited overs’ cricket and for India A in Australia last year, Pandya has been persisted with the India squad all through the long season of Test cricket. The Indian management is looking at him as a potential pace-bowling all-rounder, a space that has been vacant in India’s Test line-up for more than two decades.

Sobering down

Over the last six months, Pandya has thus appeared to have mellowed down his ‘Cool Dude’ demeanour. Is that a conscious effort on his part? “In term of my work ethics, I am more focused now. My eating, sleeping, work-out habbits have changed. Everything is being monitored and that has helped a lot,” he said.

“I am stronger now, I am eating better—more boiled food—now, I sleep around 9.30-10pm. I am reading the game better. The processes are better now. Cricket is something very important to me and this the right time I should focus on it at this moment.”

The teams (from):

Australians: Steve Smith (capt), David Warner, Peter Handscomb, Josh Hazlewood, Usman Khawaja, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Matthew Wade (wk), Glenn Maxwell, Steve O’Keefe, Matthew Renshaw, Ashton Agar, Jackson Bird, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Swepson.

India A: Hardik Pandya (capt), Akhil Herwadkar, Priyank Panchal, Shreyas Iyer, Ankeet Bawne, Rishabh Pant, Ishan Kishan (wk), Shahbaz Nadeem, K. Gowtham, Kuldeep Yadav, Navdeep Saini, Ashok Dinda, Mohammed Siraj, Rahul Singh, Baba Indrajith.

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