The series already out of their grasp, India will be desperate to salvage some pride by avoiding a whitewash but their spiritless bowlers need to put up a far more inspired show to stop the Australians in the fourth and penultimate cricket ODI here tomorrow.
Pride will be on the line for India in the remaining two games of the five-match series and it would require a massive improvement in the bowling performance for the visitors to clinch an elusive victory in the so far disappointing trip.
India's batsmen have gone about their job efficiently, posting big totals on the board but the bowlers have been ordinary at best, allowing the hosts to chase down those tall scores in each of the first three matches in Perth, Brisbane and Melbourne to concede a 3-0 lead.
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The current team bears a completely different look from that time, when the likes of Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir were still part of the playing eleven. As such skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Rohit Sharma and Ishant Sharma are the only ones to have played a game at this ground.
Two names from that side, Yuvraj Singh and Harbhajan Singh, will be back in the T20 set-up by the end of this week. While it will be in preparation for the fast-approaching World T20 back at home, the prevalent atmosphere in the ODI squad is one of transformation.
Back in 2007-08, Rohit and Ishant were visiting Australia for the first time, and both were expected to hold the keys to the future.
Eight years later, they have grown into their roles further. At the same time, youngsters Manish Pandey, Gurkeerat Mann and Rishi Dhawan have taken their first steps in international cricket.
The focus will be on this trio when Dhoni names his playing eleven, and indeed when he leads the side onto the field.
In the first two matches of this series, India fielded their first-choice eleven. When that didn't work out as planned, they threw everything they had at the MCG in terms of team selection, thus bringing in the two debutants.
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It was a bit premature to drop Pandey when he had batted only once in two matches, that too in the death overs. But the move was in the team's best interests. It remains to be seen what the team management's approach will be for this fourth ODI.
Shikhar Dhawan scored a first half-century in this series at Melbourne, his second in eight ODIs, and in doing so perhaps assured himself of playing in the remaining two matches as well.
His innings was a patchy one though, using up 54 dot- balls and then gifting his wicket away when set to play a long innings. Even so, the Indian team management isn't in the habit of dropping its key players just when they are hoping to come good.
As such, from the batting standpoint, there isn't much room for manoeuvring. It will not come as a surprise if the same combination is played up again, with the only toss-up between Mann and Pandey. The latter doesn't bowl and that could yet again go against him, with a dry-looking pitch to be expected at the Manuka Oval.
It could also bring R Ashwin back into the frame, with the management keen on giving him a couple of games to fine- tune his bowling ahead of the T20 series.
He is a key member of India's T20 plans, irrespective of conditions and thus India could be looking to play two spinners once again.
That could put Rishi Dhawan's spot in jeopardy too, while strengthening the case for Mann. Alternately, the latter's control in the middle overs at Melbourne, as well his change of pace could put him in pole position.
Either way, the team management ought to be giving these youngsters a couple more chances before they leave for home. None of the three are part of India's squad for the T20Is here.
Rotation ought to be the management's policy, especially since they are already suffering owing to Mohammad Shami's injury problems.