Clarke's time to prove
Michael Clarke will lead Australia in the ODIs, and he'll feel the pressure. There has been an intense debate in Australia about the future, including captaincy. There appear to be three camps: Ponting loyalists, Clarke aficionados and the anyone-but-Clarke club.
The third should worry Clarke. His poor performance in the Tests this tour has added more fuel to critics who believe Clarke rarely performs when the team needs it. Australian captains have been tough; Clarke is seen as a bit of a show pony by his critics. This three-match series, which starts today in Kochi, will give him another opportunity to silence them.
In India, there is no such debate. There are those who put Mahendra Singh Dhoni's success down to luck but they haven't reached a critical mass. And even they can't put forward an alternative name for captain. Former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar put it thus: "Dhoni is a guy who does things that are supposed to be done and leaves the rest to fate. He doesn't try to control everything. That is his greatest strength."
The series will be a contest between two men -- one itching to prove that he is the man for the future, and one whose future in the pantheon of successful Indian captains is already secure. If only the weather allows them. Australia haven't been able to practice in Kochi, the venue of the first ODI. Their players, during this time, have been tweeting about spending their time in the gym and wishing the rain would stop.
Just when Callum Ferguson was establishing himself in the ODI line-up and looking ahead to securing a place in the Tests, he twisted his knee in the Champions Trophy final and had to sit out for a while. The Champions League, the Twenty20 tournament in South Africa, was his comeback and he starred with two half-centuries, finishing fifth on the tournament run tally. The best thing going for him is that there seems to be almost no one in Australia who doesn't rate him highly. This ODI series should help him kick-start his ambitions and others' hopes.
Ravichandran Ashwin's time has surely come. A stable head, calm temperament and rapidly developing skill-set puts him right up there in the reckoning for a spot in the playing XI. The all-round development has been visible: He developed a carrom ball and has now honed it to perfection, he uses the crease more intelligently and has already developed a reputation of bowling in the Powerplays. His development hasn't gone unnoticed. "He is used to bowling in the Powerplays. He is an aggressive bowler, he has the variety and he is always ready to bowl whenever you throw the ball to him," Dhoni said at the end of the Champions League. "He wants to perform; he has grown as a player over the last three IPLs.”
Doug Bollinger is the senior-most fast bowler in the squad but is yet to fully recover from the abdominal strain that ruled him out of the Bangalore Test. He hasn't bowled since picking up the injury and it remains to be seen whether he will be fit for Sunday's match. Fast bowler Mitchell Starc could make his debut in case Bollinger misses out.
TEAMS
INDIA (probable): Murali Vijay, Shikhar Dhawan, Suresh Raina, Yuvraj Singh, Virat Kohli or Rohit Sharma, MS Dhoni (captain), Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran Ashwin, Praveen Kumar, Ashish Nehra, Munaf Patel.
AUSTRALIA (probable): David Warner, Tim Paine, Michael Clarke (captain), Shaun Marsh or Callum Ferguson, Michael Hussey, Cameron White, Steve Smith, James Hopes, Nathan Hauritz, Clint McKay, Doug Bollinger or Mitchell Starc.
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