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India head into Chennai Test with an eye on 2025 Women's ODI World Cup

India Women tune up for the Chennai Test PTI

India captain Harmanpreet Kaur believes playing in Chennai is a "great opportunity" for the side to get used to the conditions, given it could be one of the venues for the Women's ODI World Cup next year.

India's women's team last played at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chepauk in a Quadrangular series in 2007. They last played a women's Test here in 1976, and the ground hasn't hosted any women's T20Is yet. Since the end of 2022, all women's internationals in India have either been in Navi Mumbai or Mumbai, till the ODI-leg of the South Africa series was hosted in Bengaluru last week. Following the one-off Test against South Africa starting on Friday in Chennai, India will also be playing three T20Is against them at the same venue.

"As a team, it's a great opportunity for us," Harmanpreet said on the eve of the Test. "We are getting used to home conditions... even though they are home conditions, we don't have much experience here. But I think this series will definitely give us a lot of confidence to see how the wicket is going to behave and what combinations we can look for [for the World Cup]. Before the World Cup, with [about] one year left, I think as a team we are taking this opportunity with both hands whenever we are playing home series. It's a great opportunity to see how the wickets are and how we can improve our skills."

This will be India's third Test in seven months. They played back-to-back Tests against England and Australia in December 2023, posting massive wins in both matches. Harmanpreet says playing those two matches has helped the side get rid of "overthinking" while playing in a format.

"In the long format you have to be there [in the middle] for four days. But if you think like that as a player you can overthink. The last time [we played a Test] we only thought about winning the sessions and that really helped us. This time also we will focus on each session. The best thing about Test cricket is you have time to come back. If you lose one session, you always have time to [make up for] things.

"That's the key point which our support staff told us: 'just focus on each and every session and if you can [break it] down to two to two-and-a-half hours, think about how you're going to perform as a player'. I think that really helps, [rather] than thinking that it's a 100 overs [roughly per day] game which makes you overthink. Those little points really helped us win the last two Tests and we just want to continue [to apply] those."

India will be relying on head coach Amol Muzumdar's red-ball experience heading into the Test, Harmanpreet said. Muzumdar, who played 171 first-class matches in a 20-year-long career, has also played two red-ball matches at Chepauk.

"I didn't have much experience in Test cricket when I got to captain those two Tests," Harmanpreet said. "Amol sir help me. He has played lot of Test [red-ball] cricket and he has a lot of experience. With his experience, he has helped me with things like how to take decisions on the field. I do have a bit of an idea now.

"We don't have much idea about how Chennai wicket is going to play. We have only seen when the men were playing but women's cricket is totally different... the pace, the way we bowl and bat, I think we'll know that only once we take the field tomorrow, see how the pitch behaves and take decisions. The experienced support staff are definitely going to help us."