Mitchell Starc and Joe Burns given green light for Australia's first Test against Pakistan

Justin Langer has confirmed opener Joe Burns’s return to partner David Warner in the first Test against Pakistan starting on Thursday, while Travis Head will also bat in the middle order and Mitchell Starc will play ahead of Michael Neser.

Australia coach Langer on Tuesday challenged his new-look top order to go big at the Gabba and set the tone for a century-laden summer. It took until the sixth Test for an Australian to notch triple-figures on home soil last season, while only Steve Smith and Matthew Wade managed the feat during the Ashes.

Confirming the Queenslander’s recall ahead of Cameron Bancroft, Langer said he was confident Burns’ first Test at the top alongside Warner in three years is the first step in removing the fragility of a top six that was continually exposed during the Ashes.

“We’re No 5 in the world in Test cricket at the moment and there’s a reason for that,” Langer said. “One of them is that we don’t score 300-plus in the first innings enough. We understand the spotlight on our batting at the moment and the boys have got to embrace that.

“What we need to do is to get our top three cemented … I’m confident that the odd couple [Warner and Burns] will get out there and, like we’ve seen in the past, will form a really good partnership.”

Langer said Starc’s recall came with the confidence in his ability to hit a “first-class length” more often to complement his searing yorker and bouncer. And he said Head was in fine company after being left out of the final Ashes Test.

“He came back [from England] and scored a [Sheffield Shield] hundred. He’s no orphan, we’ve all been dropped,” he said. “Every Australian player, except I think Adam Gilchrist has been dropped … even Sir Donald Bradman was dropped early. Every player gets dropped and then you see if they come back stronger.”

Langer said paceman Neser remained in the frame for a Test debut under lights in Adelaide and that the overlooked Usman Khawaja shouldn’t consider his Test career over. “I have great admiration for Uzzy. He’s a fantastic player and I’m sure when he finds a bit of touch, he’ll be pushing very hard for a place in the team,” Langer said.

source: theguardian.com