MUMBAI: The Committee of Administrators (CoA), stung by the focus surrounding the Indian team and national selectors, has called for a meeting of all individuals concerned in Hyderabad, on Wednesday. The meeting has been scheduled a day ahead of the selection committee meeting to pick the squad for the five One-Day Internationals between India and the West Indies.On the agenda to discuss are the following: A) Discussing if all channels of communication between selectors and players exist; B) Plan how to approach the tour of Australia and discuss the prospect of playing enough practice matches ahead of the series.However, more important than the meeting is the one that follows on Thursday when the five selectors meet to pick the ODI squad for the five matches starting October 21. In focus are the No. 4, 5 and 6 positions that have constantly been rotated over the last 15 months and reached a stage from where a bit of stability needs to seep in.Between the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy and now, India have rotated a total of 10 cricketers in the No. 4, 5 & 6 positions. Be it MS Dhoni, who is a certain contender for the 2019 50-over World Cup, to Yuvraj Singh, who is now clearly out of all contention, Ajinkya Rahane, KL Rahul, Dinesh Karthik, Suresh Raina, Manish Pandey, Kedar Kadhav, Hardik Pandya and Shreyas Iyer - they've all been handed their share of opportunities in close to 36 ODIs played between June 2017 and September 2018.With less than 18 matches left for India to experiment further, before the World Cup gets underway in England less than eight months from now, these positions need serious consideration. Clearly, the last 30-odd ODIs haven't been enough for Team India to get its core batting line-up in place ahead of next year's marquee tournament, barring the top three who simply walk into the set-up at any given time.KL Rahul is a serious case in point. A batsman with proven credentials, he's either been kept out of the ODI squad because of a more prominent opening pair or rotated for merely five matches between the No. 4 & 5 positions without a steady perception on what his role is in the 50-over format.With the top two slots in the ODI line-up taken (between Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan), the selectors need to take the call if Rahul has to continue at No. 4 - where he's been positioned and removed with every passing game and series - or he continues to be the third opener. The Karnataka batsman, for the record, certainly doesn't have the numbers speaking for him.Two other batsmen in serious need of consideration right now are Prithvi Shaw - the diminutive opener who made a grand entry in the first Test against West Indies last week, and Rishabh Pant - whose century in the last Test on the tour of England was an apt reminder of the temperament he carries for the shorter versions. If Pant has to be considered, it puts the selectors in a sort of a quandary over three wicketkeepers.The Indian team is looking for a suitable mix of left and right in the squad, given the kind of challenges that will emerge at a World Cup. A healthy mix of left-handers in the playing eleven have always proved to be a shot in the arm for teams that have been successful in the past.Speaking about the way forward, captain Virat Kohli had said during the one-day series in South Africa that a problem of plenty wasn't such a bad thing after all. Yet, the fact is that India look nowhere close to figuring out their batting core.