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Home  » Cricket » Hayden Backs Pant, Warns Jaiswal

Hayden Backs Pant, Warns Jaiswal

Last updated on: August 22, 2024 18:13 IST
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'Guys like Rishabh Pant have got a muscle memory and the thirst for victory.'
'He was such a key player last time he played there and the Australian public loved him as well, because of the nature of the way he played his game.'

IMAGE: Mohammed Siraj congratulates Rishabh Pant after victory is clinched in the fourth Test at the Gabba, January 19, 2021.
Pant scored a wonderful 89 not out off 138 balls. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images from the Rediff Archives

Batting great Matthew Hayden feels Rishabh Pant will a key player for India when they travel to Australia for a five Test series later this year owing to his 'muscle memory and thirst for victory' that made him such a sensation during the team's previous tour Down Under.

The eagerly-anticipated series starts on November 22 at Perth.

"Guys like Rishabh Pant have got a muscle memory and the thirst for victory. He was such a key player last time he played there and the Australian public loved him as well, because of the nature of the way he played his game," Hayden told the media on the sidelines of the CEAT Cricket Rating Awards in Mumbai on Wednesday, August 22, 2024.

"It was exciting. It was innovative. It was just fresh and good. Then you have got your old stewards, like Virat Kohli, (he) will want to make an impression again. From a batting point of view, I'm excited to see how India have that strategy to take on the Australian conditions," the Australian added.

 

IMAGE: A cheeky shot from Rishabh Pant for four runs at the fag end of India's successful chase of 328 at the Gabba, January 19, 2021. Photograph: Matt Roberts/Getty Images from the Rediff Archives

Pant, who has made a successful return to cricket after a life-threatening accident in 2022, was an outstanding performer for India on the 2020-2021 tour, notching up brilliant knocks of 97 and 89 not out.

India outgunned a full-strength Australia despite missing several frontline players in one of the most dramatic turnarounds in the history of Test cricket.

The visitors bounced back from the ignominy of 36 all out in the opening Adelaide Test to win the Border-Gavaskar Trophy 2-1 for a second consecutive time.

Kohli had to return home after the Adelaide game due to personal reasons and five other players, including key pacers Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami, were forced out due to injuries and fitness issues.

"The great thing from an Indian perspective is that when you look at the last victory, there was no Virat Kohli. There was a very much a second team bowling line-up that won at the Gabba," Hayden said.

"That's the kind of confidence that you can expect this Indian unit to go to our shores (with) and go, 'guys, we've done this before, and we've done it in a way that's second to none, even without our key players'," Haydos said.

Pink Tests take away Australia's home advantage

Hayden said scheduling a day-night Test tends to take away the advantage enjoyed by Australian teams in the past. Even on the upcoming tour, the two teams will play a Pink Test in Adelaide.

"Once you get those overhead conditions under that twilight zone, they can be really difficult," he said.

"I would go as far as to say that the home advantage in Australia has been taken away quite a lot, simply on the basis that if you get (on) the wrong side of a certain session, be that you are four for 130 at twilight, you can (soon) be eight for 150."

"There's no chance to actually really naturally dominate a game," he added.

Hayden said Pat Cummins, who led Australia to the World Test Championship and ODI World Cup wins last year, has rallied his troops like no other Australian captain in the past.

"He has a very special leadership style and ability. It's a very different style to the former captains of the Australian cricket team that were (about) very much a carrot and stick type approach," he said.

"He's operating on a model that's bringing out the individuals and individual preparation in particular -- something which our game struggles with being a team sport," he added.

Hayden said Australia under Cummins has been an extremely close-knit team which has earned respect from former players like him who were upset with the manner in which previous coach Justin Langer was removed.

"I (have) followed this team very closely over the last two years and they are an extremely close team. Even the former players, when we were upset with the removal of Justin Langer, they closed ranks and doubled down on how it is that they wanted to go about their work," he said.

IMAGE: Yashasvi Jaiswal celebrates his double century during the third Test against England in Rajkot, February 18, 2024. Photographs: BCCI

While Haydos acknowledged Yashasvi Jaiswal's impressive record of three centuries in nine Tests at a remarkable average of 68.53, he pointed out potential vulnerabilities in the young left-hander's game.

"I think he is a package. Yes, his stroke-play is superb. His ability, in particular, to hit on the up through the covers is phenomenal (but) that will also have its vulnerabilities," Hayden said.

Hayden pointed out that Jaiswal's free-flowing approach might face difficulties on Australia's bouncy pitches against their formidable pace attack.

"I am looking forward to seeing how he adjusts on bouncy tracks. We did notice a few times in the IPL that he is a very hard hitter of the ball -- the pull shots in particular.

"But that will be challenged by three world-class speedsters, assuming they're all fit, and on much bigger grounds as well -- grounds where it has to almost be the perfect contact for that ball to sail over for six. You can get caught easily, three-quarters of the way in the fence. So they have little adjustments that world-class players like Jaiswal will make for sure."

Jaiswal has scored 1,000-plus runs in nine Tests since making his debut against the West Indies in July last year. He showed his mettle in the five Test series against England at home earlier this year as he smashed his way to 712 runs in nine innings, including two centuries and three fifties.

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