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Mitchell Starc ready for flat Bangalore pitch in second Test

Mitchell Starc (L) and Steve O'Keefe celebrate the dismissal of India captain Virat Kohli in Pune.

Mitchell Starc (L) and Steve O'Keefe celebrate the dismissal of India captain Virat Kohli in Pune. Photo: AP

Mitchell Starc proved in Pune he could extract bounce from almost any sort of pitch. Now, Australia’s spearhead is ready to bend his back on a wicket widely expected to be as flat as a pancake.

Starc was overshadowed by spinners Steve O’Keefe and Nathan Lyon in Australia’s first Test win in India since 2004, delivering just 11 overs in a match that ended on day three because of an incredibly dry deck.

Starc and Josh Hazlewood sent down a combined total of 120 balls – the lowest tally in more than 80 years by Australian pacemen in a Test.

Starc predicts the second Test, starting on Saturday in Bangalore, will be more of a grind for both teams.

The left-armer suggested reverse swing would shape Australia’s push for a 2-0 lead in the four-Test series, but hoped the bouncer could also be a big weapon in the contest.

“I can’t see it being too bouncy or quick because it’s a weakness of the Indian batters,” Starc said, having been based in Bangalore during his Indian Premier League stint.

“Hopefully, there’s a little bit of bounce in the Bangalore wicket or the wickets to come in this series.

“It’s probably something not many batsmen like, especially the guys over in the subcontinent, where they’re not used to those faster or bouncier wickets.

“So we can get up around their nose every now and again. A lot of teams have showed that it’s not an area that the India batsmen like.”

Starc hoping for reverse swing in Bangalore

Starc dismissed Cheteshwar Pujara with a rearing delivery in Australia’s 333-run win, making a mockery of the slow-and-low surface.

Former captains Sunil Gavaskar and Sourav Ganguly were among many Indian pundits outraged by the spinners’ paradise in Pune, all but demanding a flatter pitch at M Chinnaswamy Stadium.

But even the most creative curator would struggle to eliminate the prospect of reverse swing, something Starc put to good use last year in Sri Lanka.

“I’m sure it will be a pretty dry wicket again so that’ll probably help reverse swing,” Starc said.

“There is probably going to be a couple of wickets on the square … they’re going to be so abrasive and really chop the ball up.

“We can get better at reverse swing … looking after that shiny side.

“We saw the Indian bowlers, especially Umesh (Yadav), getting some good reverse swing … we probably didn’t get it going as much as we would have liked, but there’s three Tests to go and we’re 1-0.”

The 27-year-old was one of few Australians to enhance their subcontinent reputations in last year’s 3-0 loss to Sri Lanka, grabbing 24 wickets at 15.16.

“The Sri Lankan series is probably a blueprint for the way I want to bowl over here in terms of using my air speed and really exploiting that reverse swing,” he said.

-AAP

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