Virat Kohli will begin his important assignment as captain of the Indian cricket team when he and his men face a depleted South Africa in their ICC World Cup 2019 opener on Wednesday.

Kohli is one of the best batsmen of this era but this edition of the World Cup will define his legacy as a leader, an aspect on which the jury is still out despite some heady achievements in the Test arena.

The current team does have potent match-winners with the skipper himself being the biggest of them all, but it still misses the aura the ‘class of 2011’ under Mahendra Singh Dhoni had.

Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh, Gautam Gambhir, Zaheer Khan and Harbhajan Singh were in a different league with the support cast comprising Munaf Patel, Ashish Nehra, Suresh Raina and a young Kohli.

But this team, led by Kohli and mentored by Dhoni, has had its share of good results and six wins in nine games would ensure a smooth passage into the semi-finals.

Two years of investment has gone into building a potent One-Day International squad, something that started right after the 2017 Champions Trophy final loss against Pakistan.

READ: World Cup 2019, India preview: If middle order strikes form, few teams can stop Virat Kohli and Co

The ‘Men In Blue’ have had adequate rest. All other teams have already played two games each and they can’t wait to kick-start their campaign with a commanding performance.

The first match in a tournament of such vast magnitude is always important and South Africa’s confidence will be at its lowest following back-to-back defeats against England and Bangladesh.

To make matters worse, senior speedster Dale Steyn has been ruled out of the tournament due to a shoulder injury and has been replaced by left-arm seamer Beuran Hendricks.

Fast bowler Lungi Ngidi is also out for at least Wednesday’s game with a hamstring strain. Hashim Amla got a nasty hit on the helmet off Jofra Archer’s short ball against England in the opening game.

The clash couldn’t possibly have been more well-timed as India have a chance to hold the Proteas by the scruff of their neck when they are seemingly at their weakest.

India vs South Africa at the World Cup

Edition Result Scores
1992, Adelaide South Africa won by 6 wickets India: 180/6 (30 overs)
SA: 181/4 (29.1 overs)
1999, Hove South Africa won by 4 wickets India: 253/5
SA: 254/6 (47.2 overs)
2011, Nagpur South Africa won by 3 wickets India: 296/10
SA: 300/7 (49.4 overs)
2015, Melbourne India won by 130 runs India: 307/7
SA: 177 (40.2 overs)

India vs South Africa Head-to-head

Matches played India won South Africa won
Overall 83 (N/R: 3) 34 46
World Cup 4 1 3
ICC events (World Cup and Champions Trophy) 8 5 3

However, a cornered opponent is always a dangerous proposition and head coach Ravi Shastri, a shrewd tactician by all means, will be surely making the players aware of the consequences of taking their foot off the pedal.

The pitch at the Ageas Bowl stadium in Southampton, devoid of grass cover, is expected to be a batting-friendly but Kohli will have a few points to ponder upon as the weather forecast on match day indicates cloud cover with intermittent shower.

Will a third seamer in Bhuvneshwar Kumar come into the picture? Does Ravindra Jadeja’s warm-up matches’ form get more credence than Kuldeep Yadav-Yuzvendra Chahal’s 22-month show in tandem? Does Kedar Jadhav fit in without playing a single game for a month or Vijay Shankar gets a look in?

These are some of the pressing questions that skipper Kohli needs to address going into the first game.

Focus on Rohit, Shikhar

There’s no doubt that the Proteas are badly hit by poor form and injuries but it may just take one fiery spell from Kagiso Rabada to straighten things up.

A bit of help from the weather conditions with his scorching pace and ability to move the ball, Rabada could just unsettle the opening pair of Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan, who haven’t had the best of times during the past few months.

Both are capable of turning the match on its head but they could be short on confidence due to lack of runs since the start of the away ODIs against Australia.

Rohit’s apparent weakness against leg-spinners could be exploited by rival captain Faf du Plessis, who can again think of giving the new ball to Imran Tahir.

KL Rahul is expected to take the No. 4 slot but it needs to be seen as to how well he performs when the condition are nippy. Dhoni at No 5 will be the stabilising factor and if he bats like the Bangladesh warm-up game, he can be a nightmare for the Proteas attack.

But what will be a bigger worry for Du Plessis will be the batting where AB de Villiers’ absence has surely had an impact. The poor technique of Proteas batsmen against slow bowlers have been time and again exposed and 20 overs of quality spin bowling could be too hot to handle for the South Africans.

In all, it’s advantage India at Southampton.

Squads

India: Virat Kohli (captain), Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma, KL Rahul, Mahendra Singh Dhoni (wk), Hardik Pandya, Kedar Jadhav, Vijay Shankar, Kuldeep Yadav, Yuzvendra Chahal, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Dinesh Karthik, Ravindra Jadeja.

South Africa: Faf du Plessis (captain), Quinton de Kock (wk), Aiden Markram, Hashim Amla, JP Duminy, David Miller, Beuran Hendricks , Kagiso Rabada, Dwaine Pertorius, Andile Phehlukwayo, Tabraiz Shamshi, Imran Tahir, Lungi Ngidi, Chris Morris, Rassie van der Dussen.

Match Starts: 3 pm IST.

[Inputs from PTI]