Who, or where, is the next Australian Test skipper?

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

The bombshell retirement of Michael Hussey has raised a very important issue for the national selection panel, namely who is the captain in waiting of the Australian Test team?

While Shane Watson has been officially vice-captain during Michael Clarke’s reign, his ongoing problems with form and injury would perhaps only see him accede to the post on a very temporary basis.

He was going to lead the side had Clarke been unable to take the field in last week’s Boxing Day Test and the same will happen if Clarke was to miss the SCG Test, which seems very unlikely.

But while Hussey was in the side, he would more than likely have been the man to take over the reins should Clarke, for whatever reason, be ruled out of the upcoming tours to India or England.

With Hussey now out of the equation, it brings sharply into focus the leadership succession plan for the Australian team.

It was in May this year that Clarke said, “I hope I can have my impact in a short space of time and then be finished.

“I would love to see the team have success, achieve what it can achieve. And then I think it is time for me to give the reins to somebody else and go and start the other side of my life I guess.”

Over the next 12 months the Australian team has some major events on its calendar – the upcoming tour of India and then home-and-away Ashes encounters.

Beyond that it remains to be seen just how much longer Clarke wishes to continue.

By the time next season’s home Ashes campaign concludes, the skipper will be just shy of 33 years of age – not old in cricketing terms but already Clarke has intimated he does not see himself continuing on well into his 30s like former teammate Ricky Ponting and Hussey.

The other complicating factor with Clarke is the disc complaint in his back, which was first diagnosed in his late-teens.

It has regularly flared up in the past six years and, given the degenerative nature of the condition, it is never going to be cured while he continues to play, merely managed.

All these issues make it critical the selectors formulate a cohesive succession plan.

So just who are the candidates to fill the position – often termed the second most important job in Australia – should Clarke go early, through choice or circumstance?

Watson currently the carries the deputy tag but one wonders if he is truly a long term leader.

His captaincy experience at senior level has been virtually non-existent. His stand-in role as skipper of the one-day side late last summer and in the West Indies – both times when the incumbent was laid low by his back complaint – representing the few times he has led a side in senior ranks.

The role of a Test captain is a multi-faceted occupation that ranges from on-field tactical nous to off-field diplomacy and many other areas of importance in between.

While the tactical side of things will always be one of the most highly regarded components, the ability to be a leader of men, one who can empathise with his players and build them into a strong, happy and cohesive unit are also key components.

Watson, from what we have witnessed publicly, does not necessarily inspire confidence in relation to many of those necessities.

By nature he is not a gregarious person and he outwardly appears at time to be more of an inward-looking player.

The struggles with his own game of late have perhaps produced a lot of that perceived introspection but as a leader, you need to be able to handle both your own game and that of the collective – a balancing act that Clarke has excelled at during his tenure.

And, aside from those potential concerns, there is the ever-present question mark over Watson’s availability which, given his history of injury, may be enough to preclude him from being considered as a long-term replacement.

In the last few years numerous players have had the tag ‘future skipper’ attached to them, not by any means a recent phenomenon.

All-rounder Steve Smith is one.

There is no doubting his talent but just when he will be considered for a recall to the Test side is problematic.

Tasmanian ‘keeper Tim Paine is another to be identified early as a leader, with his name put forward a year or so ago, but injury has cut him down since.

And at present, Matthew Wade is the incumbent behind the stumps and with only one wicketkeeper per team, Paine’s prospects of selection, let alone future captaincy prospects, rest largely on the form of Wade in the Test arena, who at present has the support of the selectors and his skipper.

Furthermore, by his own admission Adam Gilchrist, one of the most dynamic and secure players with regard to selection, found the role of ‘keeper/captain taxing when asked to back-fill behind Ricky Ponting.

One wonders if placing that responsibility on Paine would be beneficial to his game, let alone the team.

George Bailey is the incumbent in the T20 arena but is he good enough to command a regular place in the Test side?

This summer in Sheffield Shield ranks he averages just 28, which sits alongside a career average under 40.

Ed Cowan is a highly intelligent individual, and widely regarded as possessing one of the sharpest cricketing brains in the game, but his future in the team is far from assured and, at nearly 31 years of age, any omission from the side may prove fatal to his international career.

He does have some leadership runs on the board however, having led Australia A on its recent winter tour to England.

Usman Khawaja, who is the hottest of favourites to assume a position in the batting line-up as a result of Hussey’s retirement, is another who has been mentioned in despatches for greater responsibility in the future.

But having been tried and discarded already, his main focus in the short-term will be to cement his place in the team.

Historically bowlers are seldom considered for the captaincy role and, without wishing to be unkind, there does not appear to be anyone who jumps off the page as a potential candidate among the current crop.

That leaves David Warner.

He has been given opportunities as a leader, captaining the Sydney Thunder BBL franchise last season. More importantly he skippered the Chairman’s XI last summer, a sign of faith, if not intention, by the selectors.

Warner outwardly displays confidence, some may argue at times too much with regard to his batting.

He is a late bloomer at first-class level, having played just 26 matches – 14 of them being at Test level – so he is still, in fairness, honing his game at that level.

And to date he has shown to be a fast learner. He has a Test average of 45, with three centuries, and a first-class career average of 50.

He is also regular across all three forms of the international formats.

For mine, he is the man who should to be developed as the next skipper.

But regardless of who the selectors think is the right man, he needs to be groomed for the post and if that man is a current member of the Test team, he should be made the official vice-captain – now.

The Crowd Says:

2013-01-02T05:37:10+00:00

TheSpoiledWalk

Roar Rookie


Perhaps as a temporary measure, Cowan as captain and Wade as his deputy. As mentioned in Glenn's article, Cowan does have some captaincy experience. I don't think the on-field side of the job is the hardest part of it as they effectively go into a Test with preset fields for each batsman based on video and scoring analysis. Cowan would certainly have the respect of his teammates, and he's probably the best media performer out of all the current players. I like the idea of the wicketkeeper being deputy as he's usually in the best place to see the angles in the field, plus he's someone that others look to as a motivator. They're on-field leaders due to the nature of their job and it's because of this that many teams have had wicketkeepers in leadership roles. Look at this list from the past 20 years or so: Haddin, Gilchrist, Healy, Boucher, De Villiers, Stewart, Flower, Taibu, McCullum, Dhoni, Moin Khan, Rashid Latif, Mushfiqur Rahim, Ramdin etc.

2013-01-02T04:43:55+00:00

Chop

Guest


It's a scary situation right now, there is no ready made replacement for Pup. I'm hoping there's some young kid who'll force his selection into the test team over the next 18months or so, be articulate with a well developed cricket brain and be well trained in dealing with the media who'll be a test permanent selection and ready to captain when Pup finally decides to retire. I hope that's a good 5 years or so away though.... Right now I'd suggest Warner is the the go to man....

2013-01-01T21:29:16+00:00

Justin Curran

Roar Rookie


Dean Jones

2013-01-01T13:29:59+00:00

TheGenuineTailender

Roar Guru


In a perfect world we'd have better candidates, but that's just not the case at the moment.

2013-01-01T13:26:12+00:00

Jason

Guest


Ah yes. It was so long ago one forgets. Change that to "hasn't scored a first class century in six years".

2013-01-01T13:22:34+00:00

The Art of Waugh

Guest


captain rotation policy anyone?

2013-01-01T11:39:38+00:00

Chris

Guest


Khawaja lead the chariman's X1 against Sri Lanka and did well, him and Warner are top candidates for me.

2013-01-01T11:20:35+00:00

geno

Guest


Siddle is the obvious choice for next test captain! Imran Khan, Wasim Akram, Courtney Walsh, Richie Benaud.... Remind me why we can't pick a bowler again?

2013-01-01T11:06:05+00:00

geno

Guest


He has a first class double century! (215) Also a 92 in India :).

2013-01-01T08:41:26+00:00

Jason

Guest


Tim Paine hasn't even scored a first class century. HTF is he going to command a spot in the top 6 of the Test side for batting alone?

2013-01-01T07:35:14+00:00

david

Guest


Wade would do a good job i reckon

2013-01-01T07:18:29+00:00

Whiteline

Guest


Polly, it's the total package. If you haven't got part of it, it's a long haul. Mark Taylor was pretty much made for the job, Waugh evolved in the role and then put his stamp on it. Ponting took a while and never really got the tactical part of it. Warner isn't the answer... haven't got a problem with his place in the team as a batsman but that's where it ends to be frank.

2013-01-01T06:59:37+00:00

JohnB

Guest


Benaud

2013-01-01T06:39:12+00:00

TheGenuineTailender

Roar Guru


Clarke has publicly stated that he has no intentions on playing on into his mid to late 30s

2013-01-01T06:05:56+00:00

Matt F

Roar Guru


There are a number of players in Australia who could be good captains. The problem is that most aren't good enough players to make the test team.

2013-01-01T05:57:19+00:00

Rob

Guest


Khawaja would be a great captain, if not him then Warner

2013-01-01T05:53:37+00:00

polly

Guest


Elocution lessons, increased time spent doing proper PR as opposed to brief end of match comments, a deeper understanding of what is required content wise for interviews & pre-match comments, all training that is easily taken care of in due course. He is a young guy who will find his feet in front of the camera & microphone. Quite honestly, if we are going to pick our future captains based on their 'brand' & media savvy ahead of their on field ability then it's time to call stumps anyway.

2013-01-01T05:27:53+00:00

The no. Three

Guest


David Warner should be the next leader, Tim Paine can play as a batsman if they want him in the team, as long as he can raise his average soon, at first class level. He can be a deputy..

2013-01-01T04:47:03+00:00

Whiteline

Guest


Warner? Come on fellas. The captain is basically the CEO of the team, the company, the brand...all things cricket, not just on the field. I guess it would make press conferences a little more amusing for a while. How many times will we hear "100%" today?

2013-01-01T04:46:09+00:00

polly

Guest


Hard to see an international team giving a guy who can't make the team on his own merit the captaincy but given what the selectors did to Rob Quiney it is possible.

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