Australian Test captain Tim Paine will undergo surgery for a pinched nerve in his neck, but is confident of being fit for the opening Test of the Ashes series against England. The 36-year-old revealed Monday he had been suffering pain in his neck and left arm due to a bulging disc which hampered his ability to train at full intensity. He said that it had not responded to treatment and a spinal surgeon last week recommended that he go under the knife to relieve the pressure. With the first Test against England scheduled to start in Brisbane on December 8, the operation will take place on Tuesday to give time for recovery. "The consensus of the spinal surgeon and the Cricket Australia medical team was to have the surgery now which will allow plenty of time to fully prepare for the summer," he said. "I expect to be able to restart physical activity by the end of this month and be back in full training in October. "I will be ready to go by the first Test and am very much looking forward to what will be a huge summer." After Brisbane, the Ashes are due to move to Adelaide, followed by the traditional Boxing Day Test in Melbourne then Sydney and Perth. However, the venues could be changed due to uncertainty caused by the pandemic. While Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth are largely virus-free and fans are permitted at sporting events, Sydney and Melbourne are both in lockdown battling outbreaks of the Delta variant, with case numbers and deaths rising. Some state borders are also closed, adding further complications, but Cricket Australia chief Nick Hockley said last week he was optimistic the series could be played in front of crowds. Australia are also due to play Afghanistan in a Test for the first time beginning November 27, but that match in Hobart - Paine's home city -<a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/sport/cricket/2021/09/10/australia-captain-tim-paine-says-teams-could-refuse-to-play-afghanistan-in-t20-world-cup/" target="_blank"> is now in doubt</a>. Cricket Australia have threatened to cancel the match unless the Taliban regime backtracks on its reported ban on women playing sport. “[The Hobart test] is not looking good, we are in a world of trouble no doubt about that, but the reasoning around it is probably fair enough,” Paine said to Australian media last week. “There are probably two levels to it. There's the cricket aspect to it from an ICC point of view that to be a Test-playing nation you have to have an international women's team, obviously with the Taliban at the moment banning women from playing any sport and that has implications at an ICC level. “Secondly from a female, human rights point of view, excluding half of your population from trying to do something is not on. “I don't think we want to be associated with countries that are taking things or opportunities off literally half of their population.”