India, Aussies need big wins > melbourne O'Keefe haul raises Test hopes

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India, Aussies need big wins > melbourne OKeefe haul raises Test hopes
West Indies cricket legend Vivian Richards interacts with Indian players in Antigua on Monday.

Published: Tue 19 Jul 2016, 10:23 PM

Last updated: Wed 20 Jul 2016, 12:53 AM

Top-ranked Australia and second-ranked India will have to complete comprehensive wins in their upcoming away Test series against Sri Lanka and the West Indies, respectively, to not lose crucial points in the ICC team rankings.
The West Indies will host India in a four-Test series starting in Antigua on Thursday while Australia will go head to head with Sri Lanka in Pallekele from 26 July in a three-Test series. India are ahead of eighth-ranked the West Indies by 44 points and Australia lead seventh-ranked Sri Lanka by 33 points, and because the rankings are weighted to reflect this difference, India and Australia's failure to win their series convincingly will mean they will drop points.
India will have to defeat the West Indies by a margin of 3-0 or better to stay at 112 points. Even a 3-1 or 2-0 win for India will see it slip to 110 points. On the other hand, a 3-1 or 2-0 win by the West Indies will see them rise to 79 points with India dropping below the 100-point mark to 98.
Similarly, Australia will have to win 2-0 or better against seventh-ranked Sri Lanka to ensure they don't go below the current 118 points. In contrast, even Sri Lanka's 1-0 win over Australia will earn them seven points and move to 92 while Steve Smith's side will slip to 111 points.
With England and Pakistan already involved in a four-Test series in England, major shake-up on top of the Test table is on the cards depending how the three series pan out.
Meanwhile, India off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin will be gunning for the bowlers rankings with Pakistan leg-spinner Yasir Shah leading the charts following a 10-wicket haul in the Lord's Test that ended on Sunday.
Yasir is seven points ahead of Ashwin with three more matches to go against England. One will have to wait and see how long the two can continue the rare occurrence of two spinners at the top. The last time slow bowlers took the top two slots was in March 2006 when Sri Lanka off-spinner Muttiah Muralidaran and Australian leg-spinner Shane Warne peaked to number-one and two positions, respectively.

By PTI

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Steve O'Keefe's five-wicket haul in the tour match in Sri Lanka has raised his hopes of selection for Australia in the Test series with regular spinner Nathan Lyon.
O'Keefe took 5-43 at the P Sara Oval in Colombo as Australia dominated the opening day of their sole practice match before the series opener in Pallekele next week. - Agencies



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