Though beaten and vulnerable, a chastened Australia can be expected to fight back hard on a wicket likely to suit their classy pace attack.
Having
become the first Indian
team to win a test series-opener on Australian soil, Virat
Kohli's side are determined to keep the momentum rolling into the
second clash in Perth and inch closer to a breakthrough series
triumph Down Under.
India
were made to work harder than expected in the 31-run win at Adelaide
Oval, and their bowlers will have only three days' rest before taking
to the field again at Perth Stadium on Friday.
Despite
the quick turnaround, Kohli suggested the tourists were leaping out
of their skins to land another blow on Tim Paine's shaky side in the
four-match series.
"They
are at their peak, all of them together and it's something that we as
batsman look at as an opportunity to put in good performances,"
Kohli said of his attack, rated India's most potent in years.
"We
will be, in every test match, gunning for a result." Compared to
his counterpart Paine, weighed down by a sore index finger and a long
list of concerns, Kohli heads to Perth with a spring in his step.
India's
Ishant Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami enjoyed a stellar
debut as a pace unit in Australia,
sharing 14 of the 20 wickets at Adelaide Oval, bowling with sustained
pressure and limiting the hosts to a single 50-run partnership.
Kohli's
batsmen got off to a shaky start and needed man-of-the-match
Cheteshwar Pujara's glittering 123 to achieve a modest first innings
total of 250.
However,
after Australia were bowled out for 235, they were quick to seize the
momentum and build valuable partnerships to all but bat Australia out
of the game.
Though
beaten and vulnerable, a chastened Australia can be expected to fight
back hard on a wicket likely to suit their classy pace attack.
Kohli
will hope for more from the recalled opener Murali Vijay, who has
struggled to justify his place in the side this year. He managed only
11 and 18 in Adelaide, undone by Australia's pace spearhead Mitchell
Starc both times.
With
sidelined young opener Prithvi Shaw seen limping around Adelaide Oval
after his ankle injury during a tour match, the veteran Vijay should
have another chance to stake his claim.
Kohli,
who struck four centuries in the 2014-15 tour of Australia, is also
due a score after being dismissed for three and 34 in Adelaide.
The
India skipper noted that his team's tail-end batting was trumped by
Australia's as their last five wickets could only muster 25 runs in
the second innings.
A
more determined application could have set Paine's side a higher
target than the 323 for victory, while saving India a lot of nerves
on day five.
India
first toured Australia in 1947-48 and have yet to win a test series
Down Under in 11 previous attempts.
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