Shastri Says Rohit Can Make an Impact by Opening the Batting in Brisbane

Rohit could only score nine runs in two innings as a number six batter when India went down by ten wickets to Australia at the Adelaide Oval. The host team squared the five-match series 1-1 with that win. Those two scores mean that Rohit is now averaging just 11.83 in his last six Tests.

Former India head coach Ravi Shastri feels the only way a struggling Rohit Sharma can assert himself in the Brisbane Test is by throwing the first punch towards Australia as an opener.

Rohit could make only nine runs in two innings as a number six batsman in India's ten-wicket defeat to Australia at the Adelaide Oval as the hosts squared the five-match series 1-1. Those two scores meant Rohit is now averaging just 11.83 in his last six Tests.

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That's where he's been at his best over the last eight or nine years. It's not that he's going to set the world on fire – he could – but that's the place that's best for him. To lead from the front. If he has to do damage, if he has to throw the first punch, that's the best place from where he can do it.".

And it is very important that India get their judgment right here because 1-1 in the series this is the moving Test match. I feel whichever team wins this Test match is going to win the series. I have absolutely no doubt in my mind. So it is very, very important that India get the balance right because Australia have got the confidence back," Shastri was quoted as saying by The Sydney Morning Herald.

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Shastri, who coached India to successive 2-1 Test series victories in Australia in 2018/19 and 2020/21, recalled about how Shubman Gill advised Rishabh Pant, who remained 89 not out, in scripting a memorable chase of 328 at the Gabba, to seal an unforgettable series win.

"I'll never forget it. Last session, 140 runs to get. We had two different change rooms because of Covid. I went down from the coaches' room to have a chat with either Rishabh or (Cheteshwar) Pujara. When I was about to reach the toilet, I heard a conversation between Gill and Pant.

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“Seventy-one overs bowled; Gill had got out for 91, and they were the two youngest players in the side, 21 and 22. ‘Nine overs left, they need the new ball, they’ll bring (Marnus) Labuschagne on with his leg spin, you’ve got to score 45-50 runs there’.

"They are planning how they can reach closer to the end score, and no way was I going to stop them; I don't want to change that mindset. So I just walked past and said 'do what you have to do'. In the end, we chased down nearly 150 in that last session," he concluded.

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He added that the unity of the Indian team in the 2020/21 series played a very critical role as it emerged victorious under stringent Covid-19 measures after being 36 all out in the opener of the series in Adelaide.

"Being locked up and then having to give their best in the middle, and in a country like India where there's 1.4 billion people, there's no sympathy. 'To hell with Covid, what's Covid, jolly well win the Test match.' That's all they want. So there's no hiding in our part of the world.".

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In Covid, the first Test match you start with five bowlers and the same five bowlers don't play the last Test. That says it all, it's like Australia playing without these five bowlers in the last Test of the series; it's a different ball game.".

"Plus, you didn't have quite a few batsmen as well. So it's a tribute to the players. You can only do so much as a coach from behind the scenes. At the end of it, it's the players who have to go out there and do their job and they were magnificent," he concluded.

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