Just as it is unwise for batsmen to chase wide balls outside off, it is inadvisable to look ahead and predict things in cricket. Commentators/observers/experts have bitten the dust trying to decipher pitch behaviour. Pundits and players have realised it’s better to do 'well left' than guess the result of a match. Both understand it is prudent not to stick neither neck nor tongue out in cricket.
But this is election time and pollsters are busy peering into their crystal balls to assess the prospects of candidates. This is also game time, and with India and Australia facing-off in the Test series opener at Adelaide, there is no getting away from speculating about the rubber. Cricket's satta bazaar – it's Sensex – is in overdrive, setting the odds on India's chances.
There are sound reasons to call the game in India's favour because the overall hawa is blowing in that direction. Australia is at half strength without David Warner and Steve Smith – the Shah Rukh and Salman Khan of their batting line-up – and Usman Khawaja, another proven number, is hampered by an iffy hamstring.
India, meanwhile, are buoyant, riding mainly on captain Virat Kohli's astonishing record, current form and his strong desire to win. That India's pace attack has fire (Umesh Yadav, Jasprit Bumrah) and finesse (Bhuvi, Shami) is another factor. Experts, some sitting firmly on the fence, feel India will win. However, their prediction is the 'conditions apply' kind of optimism with many ifs and buts.
“In these calculations, an India win is on the cards, provided, provided, provided...”
Considering all odds/arguments/hard evidence, it is difficult to see Virat's team returning with the Border-Gavaskar trophy as checked-in baggage.
1) Cricket is their national identity: Which is why underestimating an Australian side, however depleted, is a mistake. The Aussies are missing top batsmen but the playing eleven won't be short on pride or intent. Playing at home, in conditions they know well, they will come hard at the Indian team.
2) Pace is Australia's strength: Though 'sandpaper gate' wiped out the top batting order, the bowling unit remains undisturbed. Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Patrick Cummins are a handful who will ask awkward questions. When England caught India in testing conditions this summer, not many had answers. Faced by a similar challenge, the result could be no different in Australia.
3) Aussies have a point to prove – hunger will drive performance: The openings in the team and coaching staff – resulting from the cricket crisis – is an opportunity thrown up by adversity. For Aaron Finch and Shaun Marsh, this could be the career-defining moment, their big chance to grab the lottery on offer. Same for other young batsmen, who get lucky to bag the 'baggy green'.
Sourav Ganguly and Brian Lara have put their money on India in the four-match Test series largely because of Australian cricket's self-goals. Other past greats also see this as India's big chance to get the better of the Aussies.
Of course, Australian legends hold a contrary view – they predict victory, confident the team will rise to the occasion and redeem themselves in the eyes of their fans and countrymen. Perhaps the last word – the best analysis – has come from former captain Ian Chappell, an astute observer. Australia will win, he concluded, after carefully examining all angles. Asked why, his answer was disarmingly honest – “Don't know, that's my gut feel!”
Despite majority opinion heavily in India's favour, Australia could surprise Kohli's team.
(Amrit Mathur is a senior journalist, former GM of the BCCI and Manager of the Indian Cricket Team. He can be reached at @AmritMathur1.The views expressed above are of the author’s alone and The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)
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