LIVE: Bolter earns Aussie debut amid injury crisis as selectors make ...
LIVE: Australia faces India in the first of a three-match ODI series on Friday night (from 6pm AEST), with India bowling first after winning the toss.
The Aussies are desperate to turn a poor run of form around, having lost three-straight matches to South Africa to drop the five-match ODI series to the Proteas.
Matt Short is making his ODI debut after Travis Head was injuried. Alex Carey has been rested with Josh Inglis taking the gloves.
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India took just four balls to strike with Mohammad Shami finding the outside edge of Mitchell Marsh (4 off 4) inside the first over.
But David Warner and Steve Smith ensured there would be no early collapse with the veteran duo preventing any further loss over the opening 10 overs.
The Australians were lucky in achieving that feat, however. Warner spooned a simple catch to Shreyas Iyer at the end of the ninth over but he put down the sitter at mid-off.
“He’s put down a dolly
TEAMS
Australia XI: David Warner, Mitchell Marsh, Steven Smith, Marnus Labuschagne, Cameron Green, Josh Inglis (wk), Marcus Stoinis, Matthew Short, Pat Cummins (c), Sean Abbott, Adam Zampa
India XI: Shubman Gill, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Shreyas Iyer, KL Rahul (c/wk), Ishan Kishan, Suryakumar Yadav, Ravindra Jadeja, R Ashwin, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami
MATCH CENTRE: Australia vs India 1st ODI – live stats, scorecard, and more!
LIVE BLOG
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PREVIEW
With the World Cup looming, captain Pat Cummins hinted at a bold strategic ploy to get the most out of the bowling unit – having spinner Adam Zampa bowl plenty of overs at the death.
“Particularly if you pick four frontline bowlers, you’ve got to be ready to bowl in all phases,” Cummins said.
“’Zamps’, he’s effective at not only keeping the run rate down but he can take a couple of wickets at the death, which is really important as well and sometimes it’s a bit harder for pace bowlers to do that.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if we keep two, three or four overs up our sleeve with him.”
Can Smith & Marnus both be picked? | 01:20
FULL PREVIEW: Australia has three games to get its World Cup house in order. Five key issues must be addressed
Since the last World Cup four years ago, leg-spinner Zampa has taken 74 ODI wickets – the most of any bowler from the 10 teams featuring at this year’s tournament.
That includes 17 wickets bowling at the death (the last 10 overs of the 50). That’s Australia’s best, ahead of Pat Cummins (12) and Mitchell Starc (9), while the leg-spinner also boasts a sensational economy rate at the death.
Since the last World Cup, Zampa’s economy at the death is 6.54 runs an over. Before the South Africa series, where the Proteas demolished an Australian bowling attack missing Starc and Cummins, Zampa’s economy at the death was just 5.56 runs an over.
And in friendlier conditions at Mohali’s Inderjit Singh Bindra Stadium, Zampa has a golden chance to rebound from the Proteas’ battering – and to lock in his role as Australia’s strike weapon in the final overs.
Marsh or Green to open with Warner? | 02:20
TEAM NEWS
The Australians have been rocked by a hand fracture to Travis Head, with the team set to be without their most prolific batsmen of the last year for at least the first half of the World Cup.
Cummins will return from injury against India in Friday’s opener, but Mitchell Starc will miss the first ODI before a likely return in the second match.
In good news, however, Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell will also return for the three-game India series, though Maxwell has been ruled out for the opener.
Pat Cummins suggested the team would rotate the squad for the series with an eye to locking in their best XI for the World Cup.
“We want to strike a balance between getting used to these conditions, hopefully winning some games, but also we don’t want to get to that first game (of the World Cup against India on October 8) and already be cooked,” Cummins said.
“No doubt we’ll be trying a few different combinations, and a few different players will get a chance.
“But ideally, we’d like to structure up pretty closely to how we’re going to play in the World Cup.
“So batters batting in similar positions, as a captain I want to get used to how you use bowlers over here as it might be a bit differently to say South Africa or back in Australia – does the second spinner play a part?
“Hopefully we get some answers over the next few games.”
FULL STORY: Aussies missing key players for series opener as superstars return from injury
Starc's all-time strike rate to continue | 01:38