IND vs AUS: Rohit, Cummins play down pitch chatter ahead of first Test

Australian commentators have said that a bone-dry pitch has been prepared in Nagpur to make life difficult for the visitors' many left-handed batsmen in the first Test.
Indian captain Rohit Sharma and his Australian counterpart Pat Cummins pose with the Border-Gavaskar trophy at the VCA Stadium in Nagpur, Feb. 8, 2023. (Photo | PTI)
Indian captain Rohit Sharma and his Australian counterpart Pat Cummins pose with the Border-Gavaskar trophy at the VCA Stadium in Nagpur, Feb. 8, 2023. (Photo | PTI)

NAGPUR: India skipper Rohit Sharma and Australian counterpart Pat Cummins on Wednesday brushed aside concerns about the pitch ahead of the first of four eagerly awaited Tests.

Australian commentators have said that a bone-dry pitch has been prepared in Nagpur to make life difficult for the visitors' many left-handed batsmen in the match starting Thursday.

Cricket writer Robert Craddock told broadcaster SEN that if parts of the pitch had been prepared specifically to target Australia's left-handed batsmen, it would amount to "straight-up pitch doctoring."

Former Australia all-rounder Simon O'Donnell said the International Cricket Council "should step in and do something about it if they think it's not right."

But Cummins told reporters that Australia's batters would take the pitch in their stride.

"Potentially, it looks a little bit dry for the left-handers and knowing how much traffic will probably go through there from the right-arm bowlers," said Cummins.

"It might be a fair bit of rough out there. Again that's something we just got to embrace. It's going to be fun, it's going to be challenging at times, but we have batters who relish the chance to problem solve on their feet."

Australia's set of key left-handers includes David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Alex Carey, Matt Renshaw and Travis Head. Their right-handers include Steve Smith -- who scored three centuries including a brilliant 178 during Australia's 2017 tour of India -- and Marnus Labuschagne, currently number one in the ICC Test rankings.

Cummins said that getting a good first-innings lead in India was more important than anywhere else in the world. "You just got to find a way to put a big total on the board, especially thinking if it's going to spin, it's going to get really hard in the second innings," the fast bowler said.

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