Sports

Returning Rohit drops to middle order as India retain Perth opening duo

With only one fifty in his last 10 Test innings, Rohit's form remains a concern for the team and the importance of a strong start is not lost on the touring side.

Returning Rohit drops to middle order as India retain Perth opening duo

India's Rohit Sharma walks off the field after his dismissal during his team's tour match against Australian Prime Minister's XI at Manuka Oval in Canberra on December 1, 2024.

AFP

Returning India captain Rohit Sharma said he will bat in the middle order in the day-night second Test against Australia beginning on Friday, allowing KL Rahul to continue as Yashasvi Jaiswal's opening partner in Adelaide.

Opener Rohit missed the first Test in Perth to care for his newborn baby in Mumbai and Rahul grabbed the opportunity to fill in with both hands.

Rahul combined in a 201-run opening stand with Jaiswal in the second innings in Perth to set up India's victory by 295 runs, handing the team management a selection headache.

'We want results'

"He'll be opening the batting. I'll bat somewhere in the middle," Rohit told a press conference on the eve of the second match of the five-Test series for the Border-Gavaskar trophy.

"We want results, we want success. Those two guys at the top, just looking at this one Test match, they batted brilliantly."

"I felt there's no need to change that now. Maybe in the future things will be different."

With only one fifty in his last 10 Test innings, Rohit's form remains a concern for the team and the importance of a strong start is not lost on the touring side.

Rohit said the foundation Rahul and Jaiswal gave India during their second innings score of 487-6 declared tilted the match in their favor.

"Based on what has happened and what KL has shown outside of India, he probably deserves that place at this point in time.

"It is something that has given us success in the first Test to have that big partnership with Jaiswal on the other side. It probably won us the Test match."

He said dropping down the batting order was not easy for him but "it made a lot of sense" from the team's point of view.

India's batting lineup will be thoroughly tested by the prodigiously swinging pink ball under the lights at the Adelaide Oval.

Rohit said the practice match they played ahead of the Test helped them get used to the conditions they would face this week.

"We've been training here for the past three days, and I certainly felt that the more time you spend playing the pink ball, it gets a little easier.

"Obviously there will be challenges. Pink ball will throw its own challenge... You just have to find your own way of dealing with it."

Comments

See what people are discussing

More from Sports

Pakistan set to host Russia's U19 volleyball team next year

Pakistan set to host Russia's U19 volleyball team next year

This will be the first time that Russia will be sending its volleyball team to Pakistan.