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Mohammed Shami's fitness, openers' form key issues in 1st warm-up tie

Updated on: 08 July,2016 03:27 PM IST  | 
PTI |

India's new chief coach Anil Kumble will be keeping a keen eye on speedster Mohammed Shami's fitness along with the form of opener Shikhar Dhawan when the team begin its tour of West Indies with a two-day warm-up game against WICB President's XI here tomorrow

Mohammed Shami's fitness, openers' form key issues in 1st warm-up tie

Basseterre (St Kitts): India's new chief coach Anil Kumble will be keeping a keen eye on speedster Mohammed Shami's fitness along with the form of opener Shikhar Dhawan when the team begin its tour of West Indies with a two-day warm-up game against WICB President's XI here tomorrow.


Mohammed Shami. Pic/AFP
Mohammed Shami. Pic/AFP

The two-day match will be an official game where both teams will get to bat a day each with all players being allowed to play. For Kumble, it will be a new beginning with his boys ready to hit the straps in what promises to be an eventful 49-day tour in the assortment of islands where longer version of the game is no longer a priority.

Yet a team that has six current Test players including skipper Leon Johnson, Jermaine Blackwood, Rajendra Chandrika, Shane Dowrich, Shai Hope and Jomel Warrican will mean that Indians are expected to get quality match practice.

The first warm-up match will indicate as to how India's key speedster Mohammed Shami's body holds to the rigours of longer version -- when he comes back for his second and third
spells.

Skipper Virat Kohli had in fact complimented Shami terming him as someone "who bowls the ideal Test match length".

Ishant Sharma, who has had a long lay-off, will also like to get into the groove along with Umesh Yadav as the trio will be key to Kohli's gameplans.

For the coach, it will be an opportunity to also test his reserve pacers in Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Shardul Thakur.

It is expected that the top-order batsmen will be atleast told to face around 75-80 balls.

When India tours abroad for Test series, the general norm is for specialist batsmen to play 75-80 balls (in case they don't get out) and then retire to allow others to get some
time out there in the middle.



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