India opener Rohit Sharma believes the presence of David Warner and Steve Smith will make the potential tour of Australia later this year a “different ball game” for the his side.

India won the 2018-19 Test series 2-1, their first in 71 years of touring Down Under, but it came against a depleted Australian team which didn’t have Warner and Smith, who were both serving a one year ban for their role in the ball-tampering scandal.

“I was looking forward to the New Zealand series but unfortunately, injury [calf muscle] happened at the wrong time,” Rohit told India Today on Wednesday.

“I can’t wait to go to Australia and play the Test matches there. Australia in Australia with those two guys will be a different ball game,” India’s white ball vice-captain said.

Rohit said the Australia series will be an exciting one if it takes place as this Indian team is currently playing its best cricket.

“As a team, we are playing best cricket right now, everybody wants to take the game back to the opposition. If it happens, it will be a great series to be part of,” he said.

The tour is planned between October and January but there is speculation on whether it can be conducted smoothly amid the coronavirus pandemic which hasn’t shown any signs of being under control as of now.

Cricket Australia is considering the prospect of turning its four-match Test series against India later this year into a five-game contest as it continues looking for ways to compensate the financial losses caused by the pandemic. If the tour goes ahead, the Australian board is considering making Adelaide as the venue for all the five Tests.

Rohit also spoke about how opening in Tests is a challenge that he has relished and a testimony to that was his stupendous start against South Africa at home. He said he has been ready for the job since the 2018 Australia tour when the team management gave him enough hints.

“I was told you might be opening in Tests as well. It was two years ago. I was preparing myself from then onwards,” he said.

For him, watching the game from the dressing room is no fun.

“You wanted opportunity, everybody wants to be out there in the middle. I wanted to play and not watch the game. When the chance came along, I was ready. There were some technical aspects, I needed to be aware of,” he said.

With PTI Inputs