Million-dollar prize on the line in India
The Australia squad warm up at yesterday's Mumbai's training session.
The Australia squad warm up at yesterday's Mumbai's training session.

 

THERE’S more than just the Border-Gavaskar Trophy up for grabs when Australia meet India in a four-Test series next week.As if the Australian cricket team needed any more inspiration to overturn the weight of history and claim a series win in India, here’s some.

US$1 MILLION
The International Cricket Council hands out a US$1M prize, along with the Test championship mace, to the top-ranked Test nation annually on April 1.
Australia currently trail India by 12 ratings points in the official ICC Test team rankings. Encouragingly for the Aussies, that it is not an unsurmountable lead.
But it won’t be easy.
Should Steve Smith’s men defy the odds, it would need to be by a considerable margin. A 3-0 series win – or better – would be required to overtake India and claim top spot on the Test tree.
A 3-0 result for Australia would see them level with India on a rating of 114, but Darren Lehmann’s team would be ahead by a fraction of a point.
At the current exchange rate, that’s roughly A$1.3M for the 16-man Australian squad, or $81,250 per player (not including support staff).
Conversely, India need just one win from the four-Test series, which begins in Pune on February 23, to secure themselves top spot and the million-dollar payday.
Such a result would be sweet revenge for India. Last year they were the No.1 Test nation after England dethroned South Africa from top spot until Australia beat New Zealand in the Black Caps’ backyard to leapfrog Virat Kohli’s side at the last minute.
Australia then surrendered the Test No.1 ranking in Sri Lanka and, after an injection of fresh talent ahead of this summer’s Adelaide day-night Test, have returned to an upward trajectory they hope will end with the No.1 ranking.
Should a 3-0 result prove beyond the Australians, the ICC also hands out cash prizes for teams ranked second through to fourth.
And this is where defeat in India could get costs. Especially with New Zealand and South Africa’s Test series overlapping the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series.
The ICC pays US$500 000 to the second-ranked team, US$200 000 to the third and US$100 000 to the fourth-placed side.
Depending on results in the three-Test NZ-SA series, Australia could slip as low as third. Should South Africa win their series 3-0, Australia would need to win the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. A drawn series in India, even a 2-2 result, would still see the Proteas claim second spot.

 

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