Injury and history plague Perth Scorchers
After a nightmare CLT20 2012 - both on and off the field - the tournament can hardly get worse for the Perth Scorchers, despite their player-availability issues

For the Perth Scorchers, a lot will ride on captain Katich coming good • Associated Press
Although they have been hit by the unavailability of key players, the Perth Scorchers know that, at least, the Champions League T20 can hardly be more disastrous for them than it was last year. On the field at the 2012 tournament they won one from four matches but it was off the field that the squad's discipline really broke down, with a big night out on the town in the lead-up to a must-win game the catalyst for change. The captain Marcus North and coach Lachlan Stevens both resigned from their positions with the Scorchers and Western Australia after the squad returned home, and Justin Langer was brought in as the new mentor, while Simon Katich is now in charge of the Twenty20 side on the field.
At 42, and five and a half years after his initial retirement from international cricket, Brad Hogg continues to defy expectations. He was second only to Thomas on the Scorchers' wickets list in the most recent BBL season with 11 victims at 20.27 and a strike-rate of 6.75, and in spinning subcontinent conditions he will be an important man in the attack.
Michael Beer does not immediately spring to mind when Australia's selectors consider their best T20 spinners, but no Australian slow bowler apart from Hogg took more wickets than Beer during the 2012-13 BBL. His ten victims came at 21.30 and although he never took more than two in a match, he was consistently tight, going at just 5.91 an over. His height and bounce make him a handy spinner in Australian conditions, but how he adjusts to the Indian pitches remains a question.
Without Thomas and Nathan Coulter-Nile, who will play for Mumbai Indians, the Scorchers pace attack looks thin and will rely on men who are far from household names, such as Jason Behrendorff, Burt Cockley and Joe Mennie. There is also a question mark over the ability of the batting order to score big and fast, with players like Marcus North and Katich more renowned as long-form batsmen.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here