Looking Forward to the Ashes - A look at the Aussies

Aislabie

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My Ideas for the Australians

So, the Australians have two Tests left before the back-to-back Ashes series that start this summer. They're currently in disarray, after the homework disagreement left the Australians with just twelve fit players available for selection, and several of those twelve are players that really aren't wanted in the upcoming Ashes. Also, Shane Watson's departure has left the Australians without their vice captain, and there's nothing in his recent form to encourage a re-inclusion to the side. Where does that leave the Australians, and what would I, as an Englishman, least like to face for ten consecutive Tests next year?

The Openers

At the top of the order, I think the most established and promising pair of Australian openers are David Warner and Ed Cowan. They complement each other well, forming a good combination of attack and defence. However, both have faced question marks over ther places in the side, with Warner's composure and Cowan's talent called into question. But David Warner is the only unretired Australian batsman to have shown any kind of Test form recently, which is reflected by his Test average of 42 in the seventeen matches he's played in the last fourteen months. Cowan is a calmer quantity, and his calm, bookish demeanour could be one of the few resilient points in a fragile batting line-up.

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In reserve, I would have little choice but to call on veteran Chris Rogers. He is now 35 years old, and has little prospect of Australian duties past the Ashes, but has consistently been up at the top end of the run charts in the Shield and County Championship for many years. With his English experience, he would have to be my back-up opener.

The Batsmen

There is only one batsman in the Australian setup who has a guaranteed Test berth, and that is skipper Michael Clarke. He is a very different player to the one that was dominated by the English quicks in Australia two years ago, and has become a colossus at number five. With him having been forced up the order for the remainder of the India tour, we will see if he squares up at his preferred number five or somewhere higher up, where he has averaged less than 25 in the past. Aside from him there are many candidates with equally tenuous claims for places. My favourite three would be:

Usman Khawaja has scored only one half-century in his six Tests so far, but has a classy, effortless demeanour at the crease and has a good record in a promotion-winning Derbyshire side in County cricket. He would slot in at number three for me, a position currently occupied by Phillip Hughes who has battled with technical trouble against both pace and spin, and England's team features world class exponents of both. Indeed, I would use Hughes as more of a one-day batsman.

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Joe Burns is showing incredible talent and form in the Sheffield Shield for Queensland, and would slot in at six in my side. He has shown the ability to score runs quickly and in pressure situations with his Big Bash form. He is the first dbutant in my team, but not the last. There is frighteningly little competition for the number six slot, perhaps because there is so much difficulty filling the other five.

The only place left in my batting line-up is number four, and my team needs some leadership. I could have gone with David Hussey, but given the former's poor Shield form my choice here would have to be George Bailey. The Tasmanian seems to be being groomed as the heir apparent to Michael Clarke, and has led both the Twenty20 and ODI teams. In ODIs he has scored runs for Australia in crisis situations, and would probably be in the unusual position of a dbutant vice-captain. Not that early leadership is new to him, having led his country on his Twenty20 debut.

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My reserve batsman is Adam Voges. Yet another batsman with no Test experience, he has been scoring heavy domestic runs, and showed his class with a century in the recent ODI series against Sri Lanka. He could bat at any one of the top-six slots in this side.

The 'Keeper

Behind the stumps is the third of my dbutants, Chris Hartley. Hartley has been a vital cog for Queensland for sometimes, and is known across Australia for his impeccable glovework. Try finding me a Queensland scorecard where he concedes a bye - it might be a long search. He also scores fighting runs down the order and has been in consistent form this past season.

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My reserve gloveman, who most would have in their XIs, is Tim Paine. He has played Test cricket, and for some time was earmarked with the hefty tag of The Next Gilchrist.However, he still has to prove himself as a long-format batsman, having only one First Class century to his name, and is still on a lengthy comeback trail from a serious finger injury that sidelined him for a year.

The Spinner

With the two incumbent spinners being Nathan Lyon, who has fallen out of favour with the powers that be, and completely non-Test Xavier Doherty, I think there's a place for yet more names to be added to the list of Spinners Since Shane. Either Ashton Agar or Steve O'Keefe would slot into the side at number eight. The part-Sri Lankan Agar has been startling for Western Australia, and has represented Australia at Under-19 level and in a First Class warm-up game. If he had not been sent home from the tour to play from his state, he would almost certainly have been included for the upcoming Test. O'Keefe, meanwhile, has represented Australia in the very shortest format, but his real success has been found in Shield cricket. He is one of very few Australian spinners to average under thirty with the ball. Both are left-arm spinners, and could exploit Kevin Pietersen's weakness against such bowlers.

Ashton+Agar+E-Ra_w17ktsm.jpg

The Seamers

I may be over-stocking on seamers, but with Australian form of fast bowling injuries, I would include six quick bowlers in my squad. However, if there's one thing that the Australians do not lack, it is seam bowling talent, and all six names are arguably world class bowlers. The three that would make my XI would be Mitchell Starc, Peter Siddle and James Pattinson. These three quicks all have immense star quality. Pattinson has averaged just 22 with the ball in his nine Tests so farm and has impressed the world with his extreme pace and nagging accuracy. Peter Siddle is known as a true trier, but he is more than that. The longer he has stayed in the Australian set-up, the more of a thinking bowler he has become. With 39 Tests to his name, he is also more than twice as experienced as anyone else in the starting XI except his skipper. Finally, left arm swing from Mitchell Starc will complement the two right arm quicks very well indeed.

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In reserve, I would take Pat Cummins, Jackson Bird and Ben Hilfenhaus. Cummins burst onto the scene with an incredible six-for, but it appears that his body would not hold up to much more than one or two appearances. Jackson Bird has been dubbed the new McGrath, and his two Test caps will be the first, hopefully, of many more. Finally, Ben Hilfenhaus is much more of a dependable cricketer than anything else, but in case of injury he is an able and experienced hand to fall back upon.

The Squad

Here is my eleven, with their Test caps in brackets:

David Warner :bat: (17), Ed Cowan :bat: (15), Usman Khawaja :bat: (6), George Bailey :bat: (0), Michael Clarke :bat: :c: (91), Joe Burns :bat: (0), Chris Hartley :wk: (0), Steve O'Keefe :ar: (0), Mitchell Starc :bwl: (8), Peter Siddle :bwl: (39), James Pattinson :bwl: (9)

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And in reserve: Chris Rogers :bat: (1), Adam Voges :bat: (0), Tim Paine :wk: (4), Ashton Agar :bwl: (0), Pat Cummins :bwl: (1), Jackson Bird :bwl: (2), Ben Hilfenhaus :bwl: (27)

There are many weaknesses here, though. Of this 18-man squad, there are 16 have less than 20 Tests to their name, 14 have less than ten, 11 have less than five, and five have none at all. Michael Clarke would have almost as much Test experience than the rest of his eleven combined (Clarke - 91, other 10 - 94) and 41% of the entire squad's experience (220 Tests). His charges would have an average of just seven and a half Tests apiece. Just Siddle and Hilfenhaus would have played an Ashes Test before.

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But how badly would the lack of experience count against them? Who can they pick who has any more Test experience? Perhaps Shane Watson (40) or Nathan Lyon (20), Phillip Hughes (22) or Mitchell Johnson (50), Marcus North (21) or Ryan Harris (12). But Harris is generally injured, Lyon has lost the faith of his superiors, Johnson has lost his consistency, North has fallen away from reckoning, and Hughes has major deficiencies that would only be exposed by a top-class attack. And as for Watson, he lacks runs and would appear to have burnt his bridges. It would be a high risk squad, but perhaps it would be for the best. And perhaps tonight's Test might tell us more about some of these players.
 
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Nice article.

But too many debutants for my liking. England do look a stronger unit, but you never know. Australia do lack a decent spinner. Someone like Monty or Swann
 
Too many d?butants for my liking too, but I couldn't see much of an alternative.
 
Good article mate but I don't think Australian selectors are likely to go back to the likes of Chris Rogers or Adam Voges because they are looking for young players. Again, If they do decide to go back to these players, they can have a more than decent team. I heard Brad Hodge also wants to play in Ashes which can be great for Australia. I am not sure about Mitchell Starc in the final 11. He has been excellent for Australia in shorter format but he is struggling in the longer format. I would rather have Pat Cummins instead of him. I have also heard a lot about Steve O' Keefe and looking at his profile on cricinfo, I think he is the best spinner Australia have right now so it is hard to understand why they are not picking him. He can also bat a bit which is always a plus. I am just going to post a line-up here If Australia do call back Hodge and Rogers.

Shane Watson
Chris Rogers/ David Warner
George Bailey/Shaun Marsh
Brad Hodge
Michael Clarke
Usman Khawaja/ Philip Hughes/David Hussey
Haddin/ Paine/ Hartley (Don't know much about Hartley)
Steve O' Keefe
James Pattinson
Peter Siddle
Pat Cummins

This will be a great lineup but as I said earlier, I don't think selectors will call back Hodge, Rogers, and David Hussey just because they want to build a team for future.
 
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Whatever happened to Callum Ferguson? He looked a fantastic talent and then he just dropped off the radar. I assume he got injured
 
Whatever happened to Callum Ferguson? He looked a fantastic talent and then he just dropped off the radar. I assume he got injured

He's an excellent one-day player, but as far as I can tell he's never really applied himself in the longer formats

And like you say, the selectors won't particularly go back to these players, but I don't overly think they should. Hodge has played one or two First Class games in a few years, how can you be sure he'll perform. My point about Rogers was that he'd be a reserve for ten Tests. That'd be all. And Voges has only just broken back into the setup, if they discarded him based on age it would be quite sad.
 
^Ferguson did get injured around 2009 when he was in the ODI team and he was going well - then missed almost a year of cricket I think. Since then he's shown flashes of ability, but he needs to consistently perform in Shield cricket. I think he could at least get back in the ODI team, he showed a cool head and some class there - not sure he has the concentration and application to master Test cricket though.

And just for comparison to Author's squad, here's SK Warne's:

SHANE WARNE'S 15-MAN ASHES SQUAD
1. David Warner
2. Shane Watson
3. Shaun Marsh
4. Michael Clarke
5. Matthew Wade / Callum Ferguson
6. Moises Henriques
7. James Faulkner
8. Glenn Maxwell
9. Nathan Coulter-Nile
10. James Pattinson
11. Nathan Lyon / Peter Siddle / Jackson Bird / Mitchell Starc
(depending on conditions)

The most important things to discuss with this squad will be:
a) the all-rounder. Will Watson play? If so, will he bowl? If not, is Henriques truly required for his bowling given that it's not so oppressive in England as in India? Or could Moises play as a batsman even if Watson is bowling?
b) Phil Hughes. Looks awful vs spin in India, but that has tainted a pretty impressive summer in Australia. He's clearly improved his technique (vs pace at least). I'd be starting him out in the side in England - assuming his confidence isn't totally shot.
c) The spinner. Uggh, too depressing to write about really. Hopefully Lyon bounces back strongly the rest of the India series, and the question marks over this go away a bit.
d) the other batsmen. Khawaja and Smith were the tag alongs for the India tour, will they deserve another shot in England? Khawaja may face ramifications from his lack of discipline - plus he's done nothing with his chances anyway. Smith may have only been picked for India because he can bowl a bit, and because he was identified as a good player of spin. Joe Burns would be a young guy to look at. Bailey maybe, but geez I'd love to see him perform a bit for Tassie first. Alex Doolan must be there and thereabouts, he's probably done best this season of any batsman in Shield cricket. Quiney and Rogers would be more experienced options, maybe Voges too. Shaun Marsh might have a chance too.
 
I heard Brad Hodge also wants to play in Ashes which can be great for Australia. I am not sure about Mitchell Starc in the final 11. He has been excellent for Australia in shorter format but he is struggling in the longer format. I would rather have Pat Cummins instead of him. I have also heard a lot about Steve O' Keefe and looking at his profile on cricinfo, I think he is the best spinner Australia have right now so it is hard to understand why they are not picking him. He can also bat a bit which is always a plus. .

Just on these specific points. Hodge sadly is not an option sadly anymore even if the current panel was to wake up 2moro and decide to look at older players.

Hodge certainly pondered a comeback, but it then ruled out because AUS chairman of selectors Inverarity informed that chairman of selectors for Victoria state, that even if Hodge played in for Victoria in the final few games of ongoing shield season - he was unlikely to consider him for a test place.

So with Hodge basically a T20 freelance player now, their is no other realistic way for him to play any first-class anywhere before the Ashes to prove his worth in that format.

On Starc, he had a poor 1st test in India. However he was very impressive in the tests in AUS. Once fit he is one of the best 3 bowlers in AUS.

Finally on o'keefe, no doubt his first-class figures are good & he at least deserved to be on the current IND tour. However deep down my gut feeling is that he is not test quality.

Dan Cullen, Bryce McGain, Michael Beer had good first-class seasons & were woeful when they got a test chance in recent years. I see nothing that better in O'Keefe that makes me think he can be a useful test spinner.

As things stand Lyon still deserves to be the # 1 spinner.

However the way AUS have used spinners since MacGill/Hogg retired circa 2008 i believe has been faulty, since i don't believe the last two AUS selection panels understand what makes a test standard spinner

AUS have placed wayyy to my emphasis in trying to get a spinner, when really everything looks average on the domestic scene. AUS bowling strength is it fast-bowlers.

IMO over the last 5 years AUS should have been playing a 4-man pace attack mainly. A spinner should only have been playing IF they found conditions that 100% surely would have assisted spinners whether home or abroad.

By doing this a clear message would have been sent out to domestic spinners that they have to have a dominant first-class season the way Colin Miller did in 1997/98, where he broke the shield record & demanded selection based on his performances. It must be obvious to the majority that the spinner chosen for AUS must have the qualities to be a force at test cricket, before they can become a key component of the attack.

This is not the case with Lyon, O'Keefe or any of the other spinners (Krejza, Hauritz, Casson, Cullen, Beer, McGain) that have played for AUS in recent years.

PS: I am observing the Pakistan immigrant's progress Fawad Ahmed | Cricket Players and Officials | ESPN Cricinfo with interest. He is showing encouraging signs.

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Bailey maybe, but geez I'd love to see him perform a bit for Tassie first.

In a perfect world it would be nice if Bailey was hammering home first-class runs for Tassie this season. But i believe his international limited overs performances in the last 12 months showed gloss over that & he should have already been in the test team.

Some players step up when they play international cricket & Bailey comes across as that clearly. Look at how his T20 batting game has improved in the last year, after getting picked to the T20 team after never doing anything significant on the domestic T20 scene for tassie.

He has scored well for Tassie on the FC scene fairly consistently in recent years, so i reckon his struggles this season should be excused as an abberation.
 
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Bailey is probably worth a go, but I guess what I'm saying it that it's not a slam dunk. Any other era of Aussie cricket, and Bailey is a nobody. It illustrates my current POV - that the selectors are copping a lot of the blame, too much for my liking. They deserve some criticism of course eg. picking Maxwell and Doherty last Test. But generally they just don't have many good options to pick from. Look at Author's squad vs Warne's. Only 5 players in Author's XI are in Warne's squad (Warner, Clarke, Siddle, Pattinson, Starc). It shows the diversity of ideas that are out there, everyone is an expert and everyone has a different XI that they want to play.
 
I have a fairly limited knowledge of Australian cricket, but he is my $0.2...

I think one of the biggest problems with the current squad in India is a lack of balance. This typically happens to Australian sides when they tour India for some reason (ie Cam White at 8). Before homework gate, the top four was comprised of, for all intents and purposes, four opening batsman. This kind of reminds me of India's squad in the 07 world cup where we suddenly had a brain fart and played Uthappa, Ganguly, Sehwag, and Sachin in that order in an ODI. This type of scatter brain thinking really hinders team peformance IMO.

Australia have a winning opening combination in Warner and Cowan. They both may not be exceptional batsman on their own (neither can match up to Cook) but together they can give Australia an adequate platform for big scores. Cowan may not be a prolific scorer but he has proven to be difficult to remove and that just might be enough for Australia at this point in time. I am not sold with the idea of playing Watson as a pure batsman in the top order. I feel like be may be a decent number 6 even if he is not bowling, but there has to be a better specialist middle order batsman than Watson to bat at 4 for Australia. However, I do not see Australia dropping him from the team entirely.

Australia have invested heavily in Phillip Hughes and there has been little payoff so far. Again, I do not think he is a middle order player - he will struggle against the turning ball vs Swann. They need to take a call on Hughes soon before the Ashes. I think he would have been probably already have been dropped if Khwaja turned in his homework on time.

It will be interesting to see where Clarke bats in this test match. I think number 4 will suit him well. I am also interested to see how Haddin performs. Australia have put a lot of faith in Wade but this freak accident has brought back Haddin and I have a sneaky feeling that he is not going to let go of his spot in the XI easily.

Overall, I think the current test match in Mohali will be a good indicator of how things are going to change for the Ashes. I have heard good things of batsman such as Alex Doolan from Tas - I think he is a middle order batsman who can come in if Hughes continues to fail. Here would be my line up as of now:

Warner
Cowan
Hughes
Clarke
Bailey
Watson
Haddin/Wade
Siddle
Pattinson
Starc
Bird

Hit them with that 4 prong pace attack!
 
If Bird is fit I'd have him ahead of Starc. He still has a fair way to go before he is Test standard.

I certainly wouldn't complain if the team you posted is picked. Of course I doubt we will make many changes to the side in India main spot up for grabs is the one Henriques is in and that spinner/4th bowling spot.
 
Agreed that there is a very limited amount of stand-out talent. There seems to be a big plateau where all the young batsmen would basically be good county pros. However, if you were to open your mind to pick players who are just a little bit older, then Chris Rogers and Brad Hodge and Dave Hussey come into the frame. Is this a good thing? I doubt it. Is there an alternative that is definitely better? I doubt that too.
 
I'd rather invest in the kids, and try to get them up to speed rather than going back to guys like that Rogers, Hussey, Hodge. It can be some short term pain, but you get a longer term gain. Then again...if those older guys were truly excellent players I'd be more open to it, but realistically they are merely above average state players. eg. Dave Hussey hasn't had a good Shield season for 2 or 3 years, Rogers always does OK every season but he really only piles up runs in county cricket - and he's a left handed opener which is the position that isn't needed, and Hodge doesn't even play FC cricket anymore - they might as well pick Warne if they pick Hodge.

Looks like it's Steve Smith all the way :cheers
 
My point precisely - all the calls for Hodge to come back are misguided in the extreme.
 
Probably if they had known Ponting and Hussey were going after this summer then they could have picked Rogers instead of Quiney as having the old fella in the current lineup isn't all that bad as we have more than enough youngsters in there as it is. But definitely too late to start considering them now.

My biggest worry with guys like Voges and Bailey is they still haven't made many runs since their ODI stints. Bailey hasn't passed 20 in his last 5 innings and Voges last 3 innings are under 10. I was coming around to the idea of Bailey in the side after his ODI performances and expecting him to bang home that point in these remaining matches but he hasn't thus far.
 

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