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The West Test: India win toss and bat as Nathan McSweeney receives Test cap for Australia

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Jackson BarrettThe West Australian
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VideoVirat Kohli is dismissed for five in Perth.

India is on the verge of a crisis in Perth, backing up a series whitewash to New Zealand this month with an embarrassing collapse in The West Test.

Local hero Mitch Marsh and Australia’s star quicks rolled through the visitors in two sessions on Friday for just 150.

And Virat Kohli — the main character in the blockbuster series — failed yet again as part of a deepening form slump, dismissed for just five.

It means Australian debutant Nathan McSweeney will stare down Jasprit Bumrah after tea.

Marsh took two middle-session wickets to quell any doubts around his bowling fitness and continued a dire Indian collapse.

A measured but at times acrobatic counter-attack by Rishabh Pant salvaging something out of the innings.

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Pant received little help from teammates until debutant No.8 Nitish Kumar Reddy arrived at the crease. His selection because of his strong batting record proved a masterstroke and he top-scored with 41.

The most remarkable stroke of Pant’s explosive 37 was a six he hit over fine-leg around his front pad off a ball that landed on middle.

Nitish danced down the wicket to hit Nathan Lyon back over his head and then got out of jail when he feathered a ball off his glove to Alex Carey, but Australia knocked back a chance to have it checked.

He later top-edged Cummins for a six over fine-leg and was given another life on 37 when he was dropped by Usman Khawaja. He clubbed the next ball down the ground for another boundary, then was taken by Khawaja in the same position for 41.

Harshit Rana — India’s other first-gamer — was the victim of a stunning bit of work by McSweeney and Marnus Labuschagne, where a deflection off the debutant was snared down low by his mentor.

Marsh was injected into the attack to start the session and delivered a maiden before he had Dhruv Jurel caught at third slip by Marnus Labuschagne.

Mitch Marsh celebrates taking the wicket of Dhruv Jurel.
Camera IconMitch Marsh celebrates taking the wicket of Dhruv Jurel. Credit: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

The West Aussie bowled a series of no balls in his first first-class spell of the entire summer and even had a brief nervous wait after snicking off Washington Sundar.

Marsh has taken 2-12 from his five overs.

Indian megastar Virat Kohli couldn’t handle the music composed by Australia’s quicks in a fiery first session which put Australia in the driver’s seat early in the heavyweight home summer.

Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood took two wickets each, leaving India 4-51 at the first break.

Kohl was forced to the crease less than an hour into the series and last just minutes in the middle, falling victim to a rising ball from Hazlewood and a neat catch by Usman Khawaja at first slip.

Kohli walking off.
Camera IconKohli walking off. Credit: DEAN LEWINS/AAPIMAGE

The setback left the tourists flailing at 3-32.

Kohli batted well out of crease and made a big effort to get forward in his brief stay at the crease.

“He has changed his guard. He is up and out of his crease, you’ll see that back foot is more over on middle and off-stump than we’re used to seeing,” Australian legend Ricky Ponting said on Channel 7 and 7plus.

“He is trying to get into the line of ball so he can hit the ball through the leg-side.

“The reason he is doing that, is because the way the Australians have bowled to him the last couple of times he has been in Australia, it has been this wider line has been his undoing.”

KL Rahul looked the best of the Indian batters but was sent packing for 26 after a contentious review. Rahul was given not out on-field, but Australia reviewed for a caught-behind call off Starc.

Front-on vision was inconclusive and side-on vision was unavailable. It meant a spike on snicko was all that was used to confirm the dismissal.

“What we feel is KL Rahul just thinks he has got a bit of a piece of his front edge pad. But you’ll actually see a gap between bat and pad on the time where you’ve got the ball passing the outside edge. So, he was really upset about it,” former opener Matthew Hayden told 7.

It came after Nathan McSweeney’s life as a Test cricketer began with a sharp catch at gully as India battled to handle Perth’s pace and bounce.

Test debutant Nathan McSweeney of Australia (left) ​reacts after catching out Indian batsman Yashasvi Jaiswal o​ff the bowling of Mitchell Starc during Day 1 of the First Test match for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy between Australia and India at Optus Stadium in Perth, Friday, November 22, 2024. (AAP Image/Dean Lewins) NO ARCHIVING, EDITORIAL USE ONLY, IMAGES TO BE USED FOR NEWS REPORTING PURPOSES ONLY, NO COMMERCIAL USE WHATSOEVER, NO USE IN BOOKS WITHOUT PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT FROM AAP
Camera IconTest debutant Nathan McSweeney of Australia (left) ​reacts after catching out Indian batsman Yashasvi Jaiswal o​ff the bowling of Mitchell Starc during Day 1 of the First Test match for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy between Australia and India at Optus Stadium in Perth, Friday, November 22, 2024. (AAP Image/Dean Lewins) NO ARCHIVING, EDITORIAL USE ONLY, IMAGES TO BE USED FOR NEWS REPORTING PURPOSES ONLY, NO COMMERCIAL USE WHATSOEVER, NO USE IN BOOKS WITHOUT PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT FROM AAP Credit: DEAN LEWINS/AAPIMAGE

Starc had Yashasvi Jaiswal out edging to gully in the third over of the game after India elected to bat. McSweeney pouched the fast and low chance after replacing the injured Cam Green in the side and in the cordon.

The trio of Hazlewood, Starc and Cummns then bullied Duvdett Pradikkal for half an hour. The Aussie quicks peppered his outside edge and slammed balls into his pads with the Indian No.3 glued nervously to the crease.

He was then caught behind off Hazlewood for a torrid 23-ball duck that heaped pressure on teammates, including the out-of-touch Kohli.

Starc flung the first ball of the day down leg for four byes and also overstepped in his first over of the summer, but quickly found his radar.

The towering left-armer’s hard length made life difficult for an Indian top-order who have battled to adjust to the bounce early on this tour. Jaiswal made a nervous half-step and a prod forward when he was dismissed.

Earlier, stand-in captain Jasprit Bumrah said he was confident the Perth Stadium deck was a “good wicket”.

Cummins said he was “pretty 50-50” around what he would have done if they had won the toss.

Asked if he would have batted first, Cummins said “yeah, that’s right, we were pretty 50-50. It’s a good wicket here”.

The surprise of the morning was India axing two superstar veterans Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja for the first Test, despite them both having strong records in and against Australia.

McSweeney received his baggy green No.467 from Darren Lehmann before play and will open the batting alongside Usman Khawaja.

Mitchell Starc warming up alongside Nathan Lyon.
Camera IconMitchell Starc warming up alongside Nathan Lyon. Credit: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

India have handed a debut to seam-bowling all-rounder Nitish Reddy and paceman Harshit Rana, while Washington Sundar has been preferred as the sole spinner and Devdutt Padikkal will bat at No.3.

The Indian debutants had their cap presented by Virat Kohli.

A rare wet November week has left question marks over the wicket, with curator Isaac McDonald hinting the pitch would not deteriorate as much as typical Perth decks.

There is some grass coverage on the deck, which is not expected to properly harden up until the weekend.

More to come

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