“I just don’t think it gets hot enough. You need like three-four days of high 30s-mid-40s to really make it blow open,” McDonald said. “In this stadium we are quite sheltered whereas at the WACA it’s open and you get the wind, so it’s a different kind of an environment where we’re kind of stuck in.”With conditions set to be pace-friendly, there could be a temptation to bowl first for the captain who wins the toss.”I think there’s a little bit of grass on it, I can see from afar, so maybe a bit of seam movement early on and probably get a bit flatter as the game goes on,” Australia vice-captain Steven Smith said. “I assume it’ll have some decent pace and bounce, which is what it normally does here… but we’ll wait and see and play it by ear each day.”While the focus will be on the quicks, Australia’s major edge appears to be returning offspinner Nathan Lyon, who has previously extracted menacing bounce in his previous three Tests on the ground, yielding 22 wickets.”I like playing my role here. I enjoy bowling here, there’s nice bounce on offer, and it’s a nice place to bowl,” Lyon said. “The wicket looks like a typical Perth wicket. It’s all good signs.”Pakistan will be without legspinner Abrar Ahmed, who has a leg injury, and left-arm spinner Noman Ali is set to play. They started their preparation for the expected faster pitch with a centre-wicket training session at the WACA on Monday, having played a four-day match against the Prime Minister’s XI on a sedate surface in Canberra.”That was the slowest pitch a visiting team could ever play on in Australia,” Pakistan team director Mohammad Hafeez said on Monday. “As a team we are really happy with our preparations because we ticked most of the boxes.”

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