The curious case of Brett Lee
By Brett McKay, 22 Feb 2010 Brett McKay is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- Australian Cricket, Brett Lee, Cricket, injury in sport, Twenty20

Australia's Brett Lee celebrates taking the wicket of India's Sachin Tendulkar. AP Photo/Rick Rycroft
Brett Lee has been back in the news in the last week, and depending on which paper or website you were looking at, he’s either crucial to Australia’s future campaigns or he may never play again.
In many ways, he’s the forgotten piece of the ever-growing puzzle that is the Australian fast-bowling attack.
There are a few pieces that maybe aren’t too far away, such as Nathan Bracken and Ben Hilfenhaus, and there’s even a piece with a big question mark on it, earmarked for a second genuine spinner.
But the Brett Lee piece is, at the moment, the great unknown. We don’t know where the piece is, and more importantly, we don’t know where it fits.
Lee hasn’t played a Test Match since Boxing Day 2008, against South Africa. He hasn’t played a One-Day International since last October in India.
In fact, his most recent outings in an Australian shirt have been at promotional city barbeques for the now-complete one-day series, and to give Prince William some bowling tips during a visit to a recovering bushfire-affected Kinglake in Victoria.
Just when, or even if, we’ll see him actually playing cricket again is anyone’s guess.
And I include Lee himself in that too. Just last week Lee told reporters “As far as my cricket goes, anything is possible. I may play one-dayers, or no cricket at all.
“I may never bowl another ball and if that’s the case, I’m so satisfied with my career and my longevity. I’m not saying it’s definitely over, but I’m not sure what I want to be just yet.
“To be perfectly honest, I’m not sure what I still want to do in my cricketing life. I need to get to the stage where, if I want to, I can do what I need to do on the field.
“If it’s the case that I don’t play again, well, that’s the case. There is a part of me that would like to play some sort of cricket again.”
Lee’s words sound deliberately ambiguous to me; not exactly brimming with confidence, but certainly not ruling out any return just yet.
Team-mates and coaching staff are unsurprisingly holding high hopes.
Stuart Clark, himself hoping for a return from injury for New South Wales before the end of this season, came out in support of Lee, and declared his pace and reverse-swing ability as a “must” for the 2011 World Cup, to be held on the subcontinent.
Australian selection overseer, Andrew Hilditch, wasn’t quite looking that far ahead, but was similarly confident this week about Lee’s return, declaring “I think if Brett gets back to full fitness he’ll be very much in the running for both the Twenty20 and one-day sides,” referring to the upcoming limited over series’ against Pakistan and England, both to be played in the Old Dart.
But Lee returning to cricket is quickly becoming the $64 question. Just when will this return be?
And if he can’t show some progress in the next few months, is that it for him?
About a month ago, Lee told CricInfo that he was hopeful of bowling again in around a month’s time, with the third instalment of the IPL seemingly the obvious focus, but I’m working on the fairly safe assumption that this still hasn’t happened yet.
I say it’s a “safe assumption” because if it had happened, we would’ve heard all about it.
But even if we ignore Lee’s injury comeback for the moment and assume he’s fully fit, would he be a certainty to return to any Australian side?
This might seem absurd to even to ask the question; Lee, after all, has 300-plus wickets to his name in both Test and ODI modes.
But exactly where would Lee fit into the current picture?
Mitchell Johnson, now relieved of the new ball, seems comfortable in his skin again, and Dougie Bollinger has very quickly become both a focus of the attack and a crowd favourite.
In Ryan Harris’ 140km/h outswinging yorkers, the Australian attack has suddenly found something very special, and Hilfenhaus and Peter Siddle would almost certainly come straight back into calculations once fit again.
So where does this leave Lee?
Well, my sneaking suspicion is that Lee will soon enough join the growing list of cricketers embarking on what I dubbed sometime ago the “modern retirement”.
Following the likes of Andrew Flintoff, Jacob Oram, Shaun Tait, and Victorian left-armer Dirk Nannes just last week, I expect Lee will soon retire from Test and maybe even First Class cricket, and instead just concentrate on the shorter forms.
He may even decide to follow the lead of Andrew Symonds, and just play Twenty20 cricket where-ever, and for whoever he can land a game and score a pay day.
It would seem a sad, even unfair finale for a bowler who really brought the benefits of express pace back into vogue in this country.
But as Lee himself would know, the reality of professional sport is that injury knows nothing about the concept of fairness.
For a player whose international cricket arrival was delayed by injuries in his late teens and early twenties, it would seem that his career is about to close in that same cruel way.
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February 23rd 2010 @ 8:41am
Whiteline said | February 23rd 2010 @ 8:41am | Report comment
I sincerely hope you are right Brett (in regards to NZ and their batting) as we need it after this summer. I will follow with interest.
February 23rd 2010 @ 8:53am
Brett McKay said | February 23rd 2010 @ 8:53am | Report comment
I think it’ll be pretty tight Whiteline, so yeah. The other factor that hasn’t really come up is that the Black Caps have drawn Australia at a really good time for them, in that Australia are now toward the end of pretty much an 18-month campaign of Test and ODIs. Shane Bond has been mentioned as a possibility for the limited overs leg of the tour, and if he comes through that, then maybe he might be a smokey for the Tests, and if that’s the case, then Australian batting will be under fire, figuratively and metaphorically. I really think it’ll be a good series..
February 24th 2010 @ 11:12am
Brett McKay said | February 24th 2010 @ 11:12am | Report comment
Brett Lee declares from Test cricket: http://www.cricket.com.au/default.aspx?s=news-display&id=20404
remember where you read it first, gang