Australia coach McDonald hints at continuing with Smith as opener in India series

Dharmendra2 kumar

getcricketnews|12-03-2024

Steve Smith's stuttering outings as opener have come under scrutiny, but Australia coach Andrew McDonald hinted that the prolific batter is set to continue in his role at least until the home series against India later this year.

India will visit Australia between November this year and January, 2025, to defend the Border-Gavaskar Trophy which they have retained in 2018-19 and 2020-21. "They await (challenges against India), and I think it will be an internal motivator for him. He wants to open, it's a position that he came to us around and we think he can make it work," McDonald told cricket.com.au. Australia moves to second in WTC table after 2-0 series win over New Zealand Smith was moved up to the pole position from the series against West Indies in January this year after David Warner retired from Tests after the home rubber against Pakistan. But his raw numbers remained modest since that promotion up the order. The 34-year-old has managed just one fifty, an unbeaten 91 against Windies at Brisbane, while making scores of 12, 11, 6, 31, 0, 11 and 9 in the rest of the innings. However, McDonald did not read too much into the stats. "He'll be able to work through that, it's a new challenge for him, it's a new position." Australia's next generation pacers are waiting in the wings: Glenn McGrath "If you're bringing in a new opener and you gave them four Test matches, and then said 'okay; we're going to shift that after four Test matches' would you think that's fair or unfair? I think that's reasonably unfair," said the South Australian. The former Australian all-rounder said it will take some special efforts by any player to bring in changes to the current order of the line-up. "That's not to say there won't be changes, but at the moment we've won two-nil here (against New Zealand) and had a 12-Test run where we won eight with (four) of those being away (in England and NZ)," McDonald said. "It's going to be a hard group to infiltrate, it will take something special I think," he signed off.
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