Where to now for Cameron White?

By Andrew Cattanach / Roar Rookie

Sometimes it’s tough to be a bear. With the selection of George Bailey as Twenty20 captain of Australia, the selectors have thrown more than a few red herrings.

Bailey has long been seen as a potential leader at international level, however his performances with the bat have severely stifled these ambitions.

He is a batsman not unlike his predecessor Cameron White, a batter more than a batsman, and so it’s been deemed he is to be the rarest bird among the history of cricket, an Australian captain on debut.

No one can deny White has been woefully out of form from the moment he set foot in the subcontinent for the 2011 Cricket World Cup, and the hole he has dug for himself in the Big Bash was at times painful to watch, the length of innings dulling the pain to an extent.

No one doubts White’s ability as a leader of men and a cricket tactician. Many would agree Victoria appointing him as captain as a precocious 21-year old, while an extraordinary honour, in my opinion severely stunted his development as a cricketer.

Cameron White at the time was a promising leg-spinner who could also take a game away from an opposition with a swashbuckling innings at 7 or 8.

It was when he became captain that every long hop became a sin, and so hard on his bowling was he that he barely bowled himself at all, Victoria bringing in veteran spinners like Colin Miller and John Davison to take the first spinner role.

Like any intelligent leader of men, White no doubt saw developing his promising leg spin as an indulgence, yet another reason why giving the captaincy to players still learning their game can be so fraught with peril.

White became a batsman for Victoria, but made his early impact as an international cricketer with the ball.

Playing as the infamously now defunct ‘supersub’ in the infamously now defunct ‘ICC World XI’ tour, White was barely given an opportunity as a mighty Australian side ran through a woeful team of superstars more concerned with the conditions trackside at Randwick than their inability to breathe life into a flawed concept.

White was given a brief run of games in New Zealand before being turfed for two years. In this time, White began to occupy crucial batting positions in an already dominant Victorian side, and developed his batting to a point where by 2007 he was in the Australian ODI side more often than not.

Unfortunately for White, he was still batting in the lower middle order behind the lofty likes of Ponting, Clarke, Symonds and Hussey. It’s here he has accumulated most of his games for the national side in coloured clothing.

Amazingly for a man who was once touted as Shane Warne’s successor as first choice spinner for Australia, Cameron White didn’t bowl for Australia from August 2008, until, in what might prove to be his last game for Australia, against Bangladesh in April 2011 a single over perhaps when it became apparent his batting simply wasn’t going to hold his spot in the side.

It has since been deemed it will not hold his position in the shortest form of the game and the new T20 uniform modelled by him at the seasons launch late last year seems macabre at best.

Through all this, it’s difficult to believe that White is just 28 years of age. A year younger than his successor George Bailey and tellingly also Ed Cowan, whom the media has anointed as, along with former T20 specialist David Warner, the future of the Australia Test team.

He is also just a year older than New South Wales’s Steve O’Keefe, who is talked about as one of the young guns in Australian cricket and an unlucky omission from the squad for Brad Hogg, the hugely in-form 40 year-old former postman from Western Australia.

Time is still undoubtedly on White’s side, but if his chosen form of the game is still to be that of T20, a game tailor made for fast, fit young men with short attention spans and tempers, how open is the door for a return from the 28 year-old Gippslander whose nickname derives from the mascot of a once-ironically ubiquitous domestic rum?

Only time, once Cameron White’s greatest ally, will tell.

The Crowd Says:

2012-01-25T14:21:49+00:00

Johnno

Guest


cricket fan, cam white was awful in the 2011 ODI world cup in India as well, was our worst player in the tournament, with Tait and krejza, and steve smith.

2012-01-25T14:06:35+00:00

cricket fan

Guest


He could be of been one of the elite great allrounders now but ever since his recall in 2008 he has barely bowled a ball. In 2009 he had a brilliant year against England , Pakistan , west Indies and new Zealand and everyone thought he even couldve been given a test recall. But it wasn't to be. He is horribly out of form with the bat and he can't even bowl a ball now. However he still will play for Australia in the one day side and maybe in the 2015 world cup.

2012-01-25T03:08:35+00:00

jameswm

Guest


to India

2012-01-24T10:44:27+00:00

Seano

Guest


He needs to step down as Vic capt an have one last crack at it as a batsman who bowls when he is told too, simple.

2012-01-24T08:24:03+00:00

Disco

Roar Guru


Maybe he could get his name changed to Cameron Marsh.

2012-01-24T08:10:28+00:00

The Grafter

Guest


He could always join Johnson and head up advertising for KFC.

2012-01-24T07:51:13+00:00

Vas Venkatramani

Guest


For all bereaved Australian cricket souls out there, I say the same thing. Forego the IPL, and get a county deal. He may not be in line for a Test spot, but life in county cricket will be a rich diet of four day, one day and T20 games that will see him develop a true understanding of cricket as a passion rather than something to merely get paid for. And if Phil Hughes can get a county deal, then White will too. It just needs a bit of discipline and a thirst for hard work on his part.

2012-01-24T06:39:01+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Grade cricket. Play for warney's old team st kilda perhaps.

AUTHOR

2012-01-24T02:29:29+00:00

Andrew Cattanach

Roar Rookie


Agreed, runs in Shield cricket have never been more noticed than right now. Ed Cowan felt like his spot in the Tassie side was in jeopardy in October, he was in the Australian side by Christmas. White's hundred against England last summer for Australia A in Hobart showed he can do it.

AUTHOR

2012-01-24T02:24:50+00:00

Andrew Cattanach

Roar Rookie


The best thing he can do is tell Victoria he wants to bat 3. Mightn't be a popular decision, but you won't get picked for Australia as a specialist batsman batting at 5 or 6 in first class cricket. Maybe they'll realise they owe him a favour.

2012-01-24T01:53:57+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


Ed Cowan is also probably a better bowler than Cameron White these days.

2012-01-24T00:56:45+00:00

aussie1st

Roar Pro


Now that he isn't around the Aussie team he can solely focus on Shield cricket. He obviously is still young enough to get back in but he will need to start performing in the next 2 years as after that he is starting to get into the too old zone.

2012-01-23T22:52:10+00:00

Tom Gillies

Guest


Ed Cowan is older than Cameron White too! Crazy.

2012-01-23T22:51:27+00:00

Chris

Guest


Interesting article - particularly the point that the appointment of White as Victorian captain actually harmed his development as a cricketer. Always sad to see a player whose career has been compromised by administrators and coaches not understanding the bigger picture.

2012-01-23T22:48:06+00:00

Tom Gillies

Guest


Awesome article mate, funny. Totally agree, Cameron White hasn't been handled well through his career at all.

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