It’s been the same over the last decade or so,especially after we went to Australia in 2014 and held our own after losing the first two Tests of that series. Since then,India have gone to Australia and beaten them twice. And no team has given the Indians a run for their money in their backyard quite like Australia have in recent years,especially that last tour in 2017. Other teams come and succumb to the pressure put on them in these conditions. Not Australia. They will not give an inch.
There’s a lot to play for again with India having their sights set on that World Test Championship final,and Australia hurting after the two back-to-back series defeats to India on home soil in 2018-19 and 2020-21.
The first Test will set the tone for the rest of the series. India will need to come hard at Australia from the very start. For Australia,it’s about soaking in that early onslaught and seeing it through. If they can do that,then they have every chance of winning their first series here since 2004.
There is already a lot of talk about the surface in Nagpur. I think it’s a bit overdone.A pitch is a pitch,and it will be the same for both teams. During my time as Indian coach,we had made it a point to not bother too much about the surface,whether it had grass or mud on it.
I have no qualms in a home team having pitches that will suit the ammunition they have in their arsenal,whether it’s in Australia or in India. You see the Indian team,and it’s very obvious that their major ammunition is in the spin department. So,it’s natural that they’d want the pitches to start turning early in the piece.
It should happen everywhere. That’s the challenge of Test cricket. You go to New Zealand and some of those pitches are green enough to graze on and can have anywhere between 14-18 millimetres of grass. And nobody complains about them.