Big Picture
India's bowlers are usually a much scrutinised lot. As the ODI series
moves east to their captain's hometown, Ranchi, the spotlight will shine
ever brighter on them. They have conceded more than 300 every time they
have bowled in this series. MS Dhoni has warned that one cannot expect
his batsmen, powerful as they are, to score that many in every match.
The cricketing world has been conspiring against ODI bowlers for years
now, but lamenting about one less deep fielder won't help India. Even
nine fielders on the leg-side boundary would not have helped them in
Mohali during Ishant Sharma's 30-run over, because James Faulkner's
sixes would have cleared them easily. Will the India bowlers be able to
keep their cool at the death? Even in Pune, Australia were 264 for 7 in the 47th over before Faulkner took them to 304.
It seems an age ago, going by their current form, but in January,
India's bowlers dismissed England for 155 in 42.2 overs in Ranchi's first international match.
The fast bowlers found some movement, and the spinners some turn. Dhoni
got the chance to hit the winning runs, making it a "perfect script"
for him in his hometown. As long as India manage to square the series,
he won't care about ideal endings this time. Falling 1-2 behind means
India have to win three of four games to take the series.
Australia will know that it was the contributions from the lower order
that pushed them past 300 in both their wins. They have started solidly
but have lost wickets regularly in the middle. In Mohali, they were tied
down by Ravindra Jadeja, who has conceded only 4.60 runs an over this
series. With only four men allowed in the deep, the odd
pressure-releasing boundary shouldn't be too hard to find.
Form guide
Australia WLWWL (most recent games first)
India LWLWW
India LWLWW
In the spotlight
Various ODI captains have spoken of the need to preserve wickets against
the two new balls and build for an onslaught later. In this context, a
strong opening partnership becomes even more important. Australia's
openers have put on 56, 110, 74 and 68 so far on the tour. India's openers,
in comparison, have managed 12, 26, 176 and 14. Shikhar Dhawan and
Rohit Sharma have established themselves at the top this year, and now
India need them to be more consistent.
Glenn Maxwell has threatened to cause much damage with a couple of fearsome cameos, as his 53 off 32 in Jaipur
highlighted. He's also been involved in a couple of mix-ups that have
led to him being run-out. "I need to work on that," Maxwell said. "It's
something that's happened to me a few times in the past. Hopefully it
stops very soon." Australia will want him to kick on tomorrow.
Team news
Now that the selectors have persisted with Ishant for the rest of the
series, the big question is whether he will play in Ranchi. "I hope he
will come back strongly tomorrow," Suresh Raina said of his team-mate in
the pre-match press conference. If one goes by that statement, Ishant
will keep his place. Considering how much Dhoni supported Rohit during
his horror run in 2012, backing Ishant for a few more games won't be
much of a stretch.
India (probable) 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Virat Kohli,
4 Suresh Raina, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 7 Ravindra
Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Vinay Kumar 11 Ishant
Sharma/Jaydev Unadkat
Australia, like India, have played the same XI for the first three
games, and there seems to be no pressing reason why they would want to
tinker with their combination.
Australia (probable) 1 Aaron Finch, 2 Phillip Hughes, 3 Shane
Watson, 4 George Bailey (capt), 5 Adam Voges, 6 Glenn Maxwell, 7 Brad
Haddin (wk), 8 James Faulkner, 9 Mitchell Johnson, 10 Clint McKay, 11
Xavier Doherty