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Head-strong: Hometown hero’s appetite for destruction floors India
By Daniel Brettig
Adelaide: Contemplating India a few days out from the start of his home Test match, Travis Head summed up the early sparring in Perth with these words.
“They’ve got a first look at me, I’ve got a first look at them and the fun starts now.”
For 51,642 spectators at Adelaide Oval on a balmy Saturday evening, nothing could possibly have been more fun than watching Head take his cutlass to the Indian attack after the Australian top order had set him a sturdy platform on the first evening.
There was also plenty of sport in how Head took on Mohammed Siraj, the find of India’s previous tour, who has been spoiling for a fight in this Test. He had a sharp exchange of words with Head after a yorker ended the left-hander’s innings for a punishing 140 from 141 balls.
After the day’s play, Head made his feelings on the incident clear.
“I said well bowled, but he [Siraj] thought otherwise,” Head told Fox Cricket. “When he pointed to the sheds he got a little bite back from me. [I’m] slightly disappointed with the way that transpired with a couple of the past innings. If they want to react like that, and that’s how they want to represent themselves, so be it.”
Head’s innings, scored at such a pace, granted Australia’s bowlers a precious evening session in which to attack India’s top order. By stumps the tourists were in tatters courtesy of Pat Cummins, Scott Boland and Mitchell Starc – redoubling just how destructive Head’s innings had been.
A century in Adelaide is becoming a tradition for Head – this being the third summer in a row in which he has chalked up three figures. But two hundreds against the West Indies over the past two seasons were small beer next to this effort against India, in a game Australia simply must win to stay alive in the Border-Gavaskar series.
What was clear to most spectators in Adelaide from the moment the Australian innings began was how critical it was to give Head a chance to come in after the ball had lost some of its shine.
Something lost a little in the debate about the opening position this year – which Head pointedly refused to get involved in – was how he has steadily become the most destructive batter in the side. Head is now an elemental force in international cricket around which Australia’s batting order is constructed.
Where once it was Steve Smith, and then Marnus Labuschagne, who led the line from three or four, now it is Head who terminates bowling attacks with extreme prejudice. The struggles of Smith (glancing Bumrah down the leg side) and Usman Khawaja so far this series underline how Head, at 30, is at his peak.
Head’s output has diminished somewhat over the past year, but there was a definite tilt back towards the sight of Head on the attack in the final innings of the Perth Test, and he was able to carry that with him to Adelaide.
After being beaten second ball by Bumrah, Head punched his third through the covers – a sign of much that was to follow.
Head had noted how, in bouncy conditions with a Kookaburra ball promising seam, India were more inclined to attack him in an orthodox manner, after numerous teams have had success tucking him up with the short ball. After the England tour of last year, Head quipped that, “If I bring anything home from this series, it’ll be a hook shot.”
But the appearance of the seaming and swerving pink ball in Adelaide seemed to set captain Rohit Sharma on the irrevocable path of trying to beat Head with full or length deliveries. On the way to three figures, Head faced just four legitimate bouncers, per CricViz.
It will never be known whether Jasprit Bumrah would have taken a different tack if still captain here, but it is not the first time India have found themselves being carved up while trying to find Head’s outside edge.
For a long time, Ravichandran Ashwin looked the most likely to find a way past Head, and on 70 he coaxed a genuine chance that Siraj missed as he ran back from mid-on. Even so, Head still forced his way into that contest with several telling blows, clearing the rope down the ground.
To emphasise the value of Head’s attacking play, his 140 runs were a huge majority of the 207 scored in total while he was out there. Motoring nicely at 63 from 85 balls, Head took off as dusk loomed, scooping 77 runs from the final 56 deliveries he faced.
Labuschagne and Carey provided sound support in 50 stands. But the player Head would perhaps have thought most fondly about in the rearview mirror of his century was Nathan McSweeney, who in his second Test absorbed 109 balls to smooth a pathway.
“Every team in the world would love that – that’s what everyone is striving for,” Head said of such platforms this week.
“That’s been cricket forever, having guys at the top who build a platform and then you go from there, and when you play at your best that’s what’s happening. We’ve still got the guys there to do the job, and hopefully that is the case.”
There were more than a few hostile moments on the field during Head’s innings, and he did not appreciate Siraj’s send-off. But they betrayed how India were reckoning with the fact that he was taking the game well away from them while buying time for his bowlers to use the night air.
The way Boland, Cummins and Starc seamed and swerved the pink ball was fiendish, summed up by how Shubman Gill’s middle stump was knocked flat, then Rohit Sharma’s bails trimmed.
But these thrilling sights had been made possible by that devastating Travis Head bat swing, as much of a nightmare for opposition bowlers as it was a dream fulfilled for another bounteous Adelaide crowd.
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