Starc's 6-fer headlines Australia's dominant start in Adelaide
Mitchell Starc got his fourth five-wicket haul in D/N Tests and his 15th overall in Test cricket as Australia bowled India out for 180 on the first day in Adelaide. Australia continued to boss proceedings with the bat, albeit defensively as they erased 85 from the deficit.
Australia's pacers had stamped their presence with Cummins being the most miserly. But it was Starc, coming back for his second spell, that did the damage again. He had Rahul caught low at gully by Nathan McSweeney and a tentative Virat Kohli poking out and edging to second slip.
But the cherry on top was Boland, who got the better of Gill. The batter had countered Boland's off-stump channel probes with a different trigger movement that allowed him to cover his offstump more and leave well. But it also exposed him to the full ball, which Boland finally deployed toward the end of the session and trapped Gill leg before.
Losing three wickets in the space of fifteen balls left India down in the doldrums at the interval and kept going downhill thereafter. Skipper Rohit Sharma, now coming in at No. 6, was done in by a sharp incoming delivery from Boland while Cummins got a solid-looking Rishabh Pant with a snorter of a short ball.
Starc came back to claim his five-fer yorking both R Ashwin and Harshit Rana in the same over. With the tail for company, Nitish Reddy picked out a few shots from the T20 playbook including an audacious reverse-scooped six off Boland. He was the last man dismissed for an innings-topping 42, trying to hit out against Starc, who finished with career-best figures of 6/48.
Australia came out to bat under tricky conditions with the light just taking effect, and typically a good time for seamers. Although India managed appreciably more movement in the first ten overs as compared to Australia, it however did not result in wickets. Usman Khawaja and Nathan McSweeney, who was more watchful, ground the opening spell out particularly against the Jasprit Bumrah threat largely.
However, a change in angle to round the wicket finally got the better of Khawaja who ended up nicking to first slip. Bumrah could have had McSweeney too in similar fashion earlier, if not for Pant diving and dropping a catch that appeared to be heading to first slip.
Nevertheless, the opener was joined by a dogged Marnus Labuschagne, who took 18 balls to get off the mark. The duo stuck to their guns to see the day through, earning Australia the first day's honours.
Brief Scores: India 180 all out (Nitish Reddy 42; Mitchell Starc 6-48) lead Australia 86/1 (Nathan McSweeney 38*) by 94 runs