Wade gives Ashes chance to Paine, Hartley

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Matthew Wade’s poor form has opened the door for Tim Paine and Chris Hartley to pinch his spot as the backup keeper for the Ashes.

The Victorian’s touch with gloves and blade in all formats has been so lacklustre he has been replaced by incumbent Test gloveman Brad Haddin for the limited overs tour of India.

Wade’s fate was sealed when England all-rounder Ben Stokes had him caught behind for a golden duck in the final match of the recent ODI series.

That was the second time in three innings during that series Wade was dismissed first ball.

His batting woes momentarily took the focus off his shoddy keeping, which had been painfully highlighted in the previous match.

An edge from the bat of Ravi Bopara off the bowling of Shane Watson flew towards Wade offering a straightforward dismissal.

Wade did not even manage to get his gloves on the ball which thudded into his midriff and then the turf.

It was similarly haphazard efforts behind the stumps which saw Wade forfeit his spot in the Test side for the last Ashes series.

To that point he had played 12 consecutive Tests after holding his position when called in to replace Haddin on the tour of the West Indies in April last year.

Wade crafted two valuable tons during that time but his keeping grew increasingly unreliable, particularly to the spinners.

It is arguable that his inability to take routine chances behind the stumps contributed to off spinner Nathan Lyon being dropped from the side in India in February.

Wade’s decline has been so exaggerated that his place as understudy ‘keeper for the Ashes squad is now in question.

Tasmanian gloveman Paine and Queensland ‘keeper Hartley are both in contention to steal his spot.

Paine has long been a favourite of the Australian hierarchy and was rumoured to have been earmarked as a potential future Test captain during his brief stint in the side in 2010.

He impressed with his work both behind the stumps and with the blade during his four Tests against Pakistan in England and away against India.

Among his 287 runs at an average of 36 were a gritty innings of 59 at Bangalore and a more free-flowing 92 at Mohali.

Those calm, circumspect batting displays were reflective of the fact he is a technically-sound batsman who began his Shield career at the top of the order.

In just his fifth Shield match he batted for nine hours en route to making 215 against WA, although that remains his sole first-class century.

The 28-year-old has suffered recurring injuries stemming from the finger fracture which saw him fall out of the Test side.

He missed the entire 2011-12 Shield season as a result of further complications.

Paine had a solid return to Shield cricket last summer, keeping neatly and averaging 30 with the bat while based on the trickiest pitch in the country at Bellerive.

He failed to exploit his opportunities on the recent Australia A tour of Africa, scoring just 71 runs at 18 in the first-class games.

Had Paine churned out runs in those matches he may have leapfrogged Wade and shut out Hartley.

Queenslander Hartley won his state’s player of the year award last summer for his consistent efforts in the Shield and Ryobi Cup.

The most proficient gloveman in the country, Hartley is very much a ‘keeper-batsman as opposed to batsman-keepers like Haddin, Wade and England’s Matt Prior.

Since Adam Gilchrist revolutionised the role of glovemen by routinely destroying Test attacks, every country has put a premium on the batting ability of their ‘keeper.

Hartley is no bunny with the blade though. He is a tenacious player who has often rescued Queensland from perilous situations in the Shield.

Over the past two Shield seasons he has scored 1054 runs at 30.

The diminutive veteran would be a dependable replacement for Haddin should he get injured before or during the Ashes.

But, at 31 years old having never even played for Australia A, it appears the selectors would likely choose Paine ahead of him.

In any case, Wade will need to produce strong form for Victoria in the Shield to fend off their challenges.

The Crowd Says:

2013-10-01T08:46:37+00:00

Atko

Guest


Exactly. We've completely lost the plot on this. How many runs is a missed dismissal worth? How many missed chances have we had behind the stumps in the past few years? We really need to get back to basics, and picking a wicket keeper that is first and foremost a wicket keeper should be at the top of the list. Gilchrist was a once in a lifetime player, it's Hartley's time.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T05:16:48+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Not at all!

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T05:15:58+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I think we've all seen enough of Khawaja and Bird now to make some informed observations.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T05:09:29+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Not sure ChrisB I have seen as much support for Paine as Hartley

2013-10-01T04:59:02+00:00

Rising Power

Guest


No pun intended I'm sure

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T02:46:49+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


He is in good hands with Berry.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T02:44:08+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Triffit had a reasonable season for WA last summer.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T02:43:04+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Haha yeah some of the idle chat you can hear is classic!

2013-10-01T02:31:42+00:00

Rising Power

Guest


Tim Ludeman impresses for the Redbacks and the Strikers with gloves and bat. Keep an eye on him.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T02:31:09+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hartley has definitely bounced back with his batting form the last few seasons.

2013-10-01T02:28:33+00:00

Michael Mills

Guest


From what I've read, Handscomb is a batsman that Victoria has been manufacturing into a keeper. Ryan Carters was the backup to Wade, but has now moved up to NSW because he'd fallen down the pecking order. I've never seen his keeping (not that I'm an technical expert anyway), but that doesn't sound like he's a viable option. Tom Triffit seems to be highly regarded.

2013-10-01T02:22:54+00:00

Michael Mills

Guest


Manou was an excellent keeper and was in good form with the bat when called up in 2009. He deserved his spot. My original post was meant to say: "Up until the last two-to-three seasons, his performances HAD NOT really demanded selection ahead guys like Haddin, Manou, Ronchi or Paine." In terms of batting performances, Hartley started strongly (scored a ton on FC debut I think), but then faded in the 2006-09 period. He was dropped from the Queensland limited-overs teams for a spell as well. He's come back strongly with the bat since then. I'm not sure whether his keeping form fluctuated over that time, but it's been very good every I've seen him on TV.

2013-09-30T23:22:37+00:00

ChrisB

Guest


Again too reliant on actual direct observation for the roar, as red kev said above Neville isn't better. He just isn't, no questions need be asked. The Australian selectors , who include some bloke called Marsh - what they hell would he know about keeping? - as part of their anti-test agenda will keep picking second-raters like Wade or Paine so they can ignore Hartley, who you just know is the best without needing to actually see him play. Sort of like Bird, Khawaja, O'keefe etc

2013-09-30T23:12:44+00:00

ChrisB

Guest


Good god man, you can't come on here and sprout these calls for evidence, fairness etc The Roar consensus knows Hartley is the best keeper and has been done an injustice. It matters not a jot that hardly anyone on here had seen him keep (apart from the odd televised 1 dayer or T20 which don't matter to the consensus when it comes to picking rubbish like Johnson or smith but count when considering those who are unjustly hated by selectors) we know he's the best because lots of people on here say so.

2013-09-30T22:33:33+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


It is also great if you want to hear two blokes talking about their lunch. With the new money CA has, some of which they gave to channel 9 to show the One Day cup($800k), you would think they could spend some on a commentator or two for the internet streams.

AUTHOR

2013-09-30T14:44:02+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


There are a few similarities between NZ and Aus. I'd love to see back to back 3-Test series between them at the moment I reckon they'd be cracking contests.

AUTHOR

2013-09-30T14:42:27+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Nevill is a year younger than Paine and with Haddin back in the Test side should be keeping again for NSW. Handscomb I haven't seen much of but he does look alright with the bat at this point.

2013-09-30T13:57:25+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Correction. Handscomb only averages 29 in first class cricket but he is only 22

2013-09-30T13:42:04+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Totally agree mate. I'm just really hoping that Paine has a great year with the bat. Maybe around 500-550 runs at 40-45. It's a great shame what happened to him. I read somewhere that he's had to change his grip on the bat since that finger injury, so surely that has to be a big reason for such a poor return last shield season. Hopefully he is getting use to it now. I've never seen Neville keep but I did here either Stuart Clark or Stuart macgill say he was the best gloveman an in australia last year, so I've been a little surprised from some earlier posts today. He was the guy I was hoping for. Hartley doesn't do it for me. Handscombe has a good first class batting average but once again I haven't seen him keep. He will be playing grade and 2nd cricket though this year.

AUTHOR

2013-09-30T13:20:25+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Yeah Nudge there is no doubt that Wade's batting is far advanced on his keeping. I just hope the selectors don't do what they apparently considered in Eng and play him as a specialist batsman until he actually proves he can fulfil that role at FC level.

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