The test match that begins in Adelaide tomorrow is a new beginning for cricket. Looming over it is the tragic death of Phillip Hughes. His memory will pervade the game between Australia and India - one in which he might well have played - as well as the whole summer after it and perhaps professional cricket beyond that.
It was noticeable at Australia's first training session in the city on Friday, two days after Hughes' funeral, that the fast bowlers were not sparing in their use of bouncers. It was a bouncer that caused terminal injury to Hughes in a Sheffield Shield match at Sydney Cricket Ground, when in an unprecedented accident the ball hit him in the neck and severed a crucial artery leading to the brain.
This was the players' way of saying that the game must go on. Indeed, in his column in the Australian on Saturday, former Australia captain Ricky Ponting wrote, "I would love to see a bouncer bowled as the first ball in Adelaide. It would clear the air, announce the game is on, and if that's done I think it might have a healing effect on everybody."
It is Mitchell Johnson, the fastest, most destructive and brutal bowler of the age, to whom most attention will be directed. Johnson is a great cricketer and has intimidated some of the most accomplished batsmen of the era.
But Johnson is also a thoroughly good bloke and in the wake of what happened to his friend, the 150km/h swinging throat ball might not be easy to propel.