Aussies would be hard to beat at home: Watson

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Press Trust of India Mumbai
Last Updated : Apr 16 2014 | 3:24 PM IST
Australia were blanked 0-4 by India in their away tour last year, but their all-rounder Shane Watson today said that his side would be hard to beat when the same opponents tour Down Under for a four-match Test series later this year.
Watson's optimism stems from the fact that the team composition and environment is different to the one that suffered a humiliating loss in India as indicated by the fact that they defeated ICC top-ranked South Africa 2-1 in the latter's backyard recently.
"We're playing some very good tough Test cricket. We beat South Africa on their home soil which was a huge achievement for us as well. So under all these conditions, we're certainly going to be hard to beat," Watson, the captain of IPL team Rajasthan Royals, told PTI in an e-mail interview.
"It's certainly a totally different unit to what we were in the Test series we played in India. We had a lot of issues that were going on in and around our team. So it's certainly a very different environment now that we've got," he explained.
Watson was referring to the suspension of himself and three other players by the team management from the third Test at Mohali for failing to complete homework assignment after the heavy losses suffered by the visitors in the first and second Tests and Chennai and Hyderabad respectively.
Also dropped for the Mohali Test for the same reason were batsman Usman Khawaja and pace bowlers James Pattison and Mitchell Johnson. Watson had a poor series, accumulating only 99 runs in three Tests with a highest score of 28.
He feels India's plight in Australia in adapting to wicket conditions would be similar to theirs in this country.
"Certainly the conditions that we played here in India during the Test series were very extreme to what we would ever face in Australia.
"So, the Indians would have to come over and adjust to the pace and bounce and wickets, with how we are as a team. We are a much better and tighter unit and playing much smarter cricket, specially Test cricket," said the all-rounder who has played 52 Tests.
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First Published: Apr 16 2014 | 3:24 PM IST

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