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News

Typical Adelaide track might give India respite

The Adelaide Oval might provide the under-the-pump Indian batting line-up some respite with a typical Adelaide pitch, which is usually good for batting without monsters in it

The Adelaide strip is the same one that was used in the Ashes Test last year  •  Scott Barbour/Wisden & MCC Cricket Photograph of the Year 2010

The Adelaide strip is the same one that was used in the Ashes Test last year  •  Scott Barbour/Wisden & MCC Cricket Photograph of the Year 2010

The Adelaide Oval might provide the under-the-pump Indian batting line-up some respite with a typical Adelaide pitch, which is usually good for batting without monsters in it. Four days before the start of the Test, the strip - same as the one used in the Ashes Test that Australia lost on the fifth day - sports an even covering of grass, but it seems dry. More hot days are forecast in the lead-up to the Test, and Adelaide is scorching in the mid-to-late 30s right now.
"The heat will definitely dry the pitch out and it's reasonably dry already," Damien Hough, the Adelaide Oval curator, said. "There'll be a little in it on day one, but Adelaide Oval traditionally is a good batting pitch with a bit of spin on days three, four and five. It will always produce spin later on as the game goes. Normally there will be a little bit of inconsistent bounce on days four and five, so I wouldn't expect anything else."
Hough, though, said the pitch did look greener this year that was because he wanted good carry, and also guard against the dry and hot week in the lead-up to the Test. "We're trying to get a pitch with as much bounce and carry as we can possibly get," he said. "We want something that will settle down well for the batters on days two and three, and variable bounce on days four and five, and something in there for the spinners."
Hough said that didn't have anything to do with early finishes to the previous Tests and the pressure to take the Test into the fifth day. "I have had no such communication," Hough said. "I'm just here to produce a sporting pitch. I'll leave it up to the teams to fight that out."
For all of Adelaide's reputation of being a batsman's paradise, only three Tests have been drawn here since 1990-91. A part of it has to be down to the Australian domination for a majority of this period. The rest, Hough said, could have something to do with the seam movement when the pitch is fresh on day one, and variable bounce towards the end of the match, which has led to many a third-innings collapse. India's only win here came thanks to a third-innings collapse.

Sidharth Monga is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo