Australia’s David Warner is refusing to take the bait after being publicly sledged by India’s cricketers, but even if he wanted to fire back the struggling opening batsman has few runs to back up any fighting words.
The lefthander has cobbled together just 98 runs from four innings in the first two tests of the series in India and has fallen three times to spinner Ravichandran Ashwin — twice in last week’s defeat at Bangalore, which levelled the series 1-1.
Warner has regularly punished India’s bowlers on the seam-friendly wickets back home, belting them for nearly 50 runs on average, but he has been neutered by the subcontinent’s flat pitches where he averages 24.41.
India have seized upon Warner’s woes, with top-order batsman Cheteshwar Pujara poking fun at the vice captain’s struggles against Ashwin, who has dismissed him nine times in his career, the most by any bowler.
“They were always under pressure when they walk into bat,” Pujara said in a video interview with Ashwin posted on the Indian cricket board’s website.
“I wanted to make sure their batsmen are thinking about it,” Pujara added. “Especially David Warner. Whenever he walks in to bat, Ash is always happy.
“So I always keep reminding him that Ash is the one.”
Warner plundered India for 457 runs in the 2014/15 home series, which Australia won 2-0, and was involved in a number of verbal battles with the tourists, earning him a code of conduct fine in the second test in Adelaide.