"I would be surprised if (the ball) flies around here," Hazlewood said reacting to bounce predictions by the pitch curator Pandurang Salgaoncar, who is a former fast bowler.
"I think there is still a day and half for the start. We will have a good look in the morning of the game and see how it looks. Hopefully it will fly around."
Salgaoncar has said that the wicket will not have much lateral movement for the ball, but it has good bounce and the balls will fly.
"In Australia, you get good bounce most of the games. Obviously you are not going to get that here and have to look get five wickets elsewhere in other ways, whether it's through reverse swing, or cutters on wickets that can spin and grip as well. I have been working hard on a few different things. Hopefully, can put them in practice this week.
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"Maybe, on day one, the nicks are going to carry with the harder ball. But it's different to Australia where the nicks generally carry. But you have to get your head around it. Once it gets softer it's not going to carry. You try and take wickets in other ways. Bowled, LBW, caught in front of the wicket, there are plenty of chances," he added.
"I haven't bowled with the SG ball, this is my first time. It's a little bit different. I have been training with it. The brand new ball swings a bit, and once it's old reverses. Good signs there."
He also exuded confidence about his side's preparations to counter India in their own den.
"This is a really different group even from Sri Lanka. We have had a good preparation, two weeks in Dubai, then in Mumbai (where the team played a three-day first class warm-up game). Definitely we are well prepared this time. I think we have done everything we can, leading to the first Test. It is about putting those plans into action this week," said Hazlewood at a media conference here.
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