Australia have got off to the worst possible start in their Test series against India, with the tourists bowled out for 177 runs in Nagpur.
David Warner's stumps went cartwheeling - a sight becoming all-too-common for the ageing opener - with Indian quick Mohammed Shami delighted as the Aussie appeared to blame the pitch for missing the ball entirely as he departed for one run.
It continues the 36-year-old opener's poor form in India, where he averages just 24.25.
Khawaja didn't fare much better, surviving an appeal but later being given out LBW by the third umpire after a ball from Mohammed Siraj that kept low down his legside. He also made just one run.
Australia have not won a Test series in India for 19 years, and despite Josh Hazlewood and Cameron Green being last minute withdrawals, a groundbreaking win was not out of the question under skipper Pat Cummins.
The visitors' hopes of reviving their first innings rested on the shoulders of gun batters Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith. However both players lost their wickets just before the half century mark, with Labuschagne gone for 49 and Smith out for 37.
Matthew Renshaw lost his wicket for a golden duck before Alex Carey made a stoic 36 runs.
As Warner walked off following his dismissal, he glared pointedly at the wicket, following concerns prior to the Test that India had doctored the pitch to make life tough for left-handers, though this delivery didn't appear to do anything untoward.
The decision to drop Travis Head set cricket twitter into a frenzy, even more so than the dismissal of Warner.
It also prompted a rebuke from Aussie legend Steve Waugh, who said it was a 'gamble and overanalysing' on the back of Head's best-ever Test summer.
'Hard to believe we can drop the number 4 ranked test batsman in the world and probably our best batsman in the last 12 months plus he bowls better than average off spin - let’s wait and see-maybe the Aussie selectors are geniuses!' Waugh wrote on his Instagram.
Aussie great Damien Martyn agreed with Waugh, writing 'it's a big call, now we wait', while fans and pundits were also shocked with the decision.
The left-hander made 655 runs @ 50.38 in 2022, and batted with a phenomenal strike-rate. Crucially, he's looked to be the most comfortable and confident in his career at the crease, and appeared ready to put his subcontinent woes behind him.
He's also the number four ranked Test batter in the world.
On the other side of the coin, Handscomb has not played Test cricket since 2019, while Renshaw also spent a significant time in the wilderness before being recalled for the New Year's Test in Sydney.