NEW DELHI: The much-anticipated comeback of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma ended in a blink, as both endured brief outings in India's seven-wicket defeat to Australia in a rain-affected first ODI on Sunday in Perth.
Sent into bat, India struggled to post a modest 136/9 in a match reduced to 26 overs per side due to multiple rain interruptions. Australia were set a revised DLS target of 131, which they comfortably chased down in 21.1 overs.
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Early breakthroughs saw Travis Head fall to Arshdeep Singh, who slashed to Harshit Rana at deep third man, while Matthew Short was dismissed cheaply without making an impact.
However, local skipper Mitchell Marsh anchored the innings with a powerful 46 not out off 52 balls, forging a crucial 55-run partnership with Josh Philippe (37 off 29 balls) that kept Australia ahead and sealed the chase.
The Indian pacers - Arshdeep Singh, Mohammad Siraj, and Harshit Rana - struggled to match the discipline of their Australian counterparts, offering plenty of scoring opportunities to the hosts.
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Mitchell Marsh capitalized ruthlessly, sending a six off each of the three bowlers, with a spectacular inside-out smash over covers off Siraj standing out as the highlight.
Josh Philippe provided valuable support with a busy innings, and his eventual dismissal barely slowed Australia’s momentum, as they cruised to a comfortable win and took a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.
No Ro-Ko show
Earlier, India were robbed of the momentum by the constant weather interventions and relentless Australian new ball bowlers, except when KL Rahul (38, 30 balls) was in the middle.
But before the skies opened up on several occasions, Australian bowlers used the extra bounce on the Optus Stadium pitch to get rid of two old foes. Rohit (8), who was also playing his 500th match for India, walked in alongside new captain Shubman Gill to loud cheers from the Perth crowd, but his stay was snapped after just 14 balls.
Australia win the 1st ODI by 7 wickets (DLS method). #TeamIndia will look to bounce back in the next match.
— BCCI (@BCCI) October 19, 2025
Scorecard ▶ https://t.co/O1RsjJTHhM#AUSvIND pic.twitter.com/0BsIlU3qRC
Rohit played a sumptuous straight drive off Mitchell Starc, which offered a heady time ride back to the glory days.
But that was it for the day for the Mumbai man, as Josh Hazlewood's ability to find steep bounce from the quarter length ended his tenure. The ever-rising ball kissed the sticker of Rohit’s bat and travelled to debutant Matthew Renshaw at second slip.
Kohli walked in amid even louder cheer, but the familiar ODI greatness was nowhere to be seen. In a pre-match chat, Kohli had detailed how Australia had often brought the best out of him as a batter.
But on this instance, Starc elicited the worst out of Kohli — first through a habitual prod outside the off-stump. It eventually consumed Kohli. A drive on the up off the left-arm pacer took the edge of his bat and Cooper Connolly at backward point snaffled a wonderful catch to curtail Kohli's agonising eight-ball innings.
It was Kohli's first duck in Australia. Now, the veterans need something substantial in the subsequent ODIs at Adelaide and Sydney to convince the powers that be of their fire for a longer journey.
Unlike his senior colleagues, skipper Gill looked assured but a rather casual attempt to flick Nathan Ellis resulted in a down the leg side catch to wicketkeeper Philippe.
Vice-captain Shreyas Iyer perished in the same way. Hazlewood strangled him for space with a bouncer on ribcage that Iyer gloved to Philippe as India slid to 45 for four in the 14th over.
Finally, India found their wheels moving through a 39-run fifth-wicket alliance between Axar Patel (31) and Rahul before the former fell to spinner Matthew Kuhnemann. Rahul was quite impressive in his knock, dealing with the bounce effectively while getting on top of the ball nicely.
The straight drive and pull off Ellis off successive balls for fours were from the top draw. Rahul slipped into overdrive once spinners were introduced, and slammed Matthew Short for two sixes in a row.
Rahul and Washington Sundar added 30 runs for the sixth wicket. But the limited number of overs and late flurry of wickets affected India's acceleration in the backend.
(With PTI Inputs)