Give Hilfenhaus a chance for Ashes redemption

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

The forgotten quick of Australian cricket, Ben Hilfenhaus, has received a timely boost after being named as one of eight fast bowlers in contention for this summer’s Ashes.

When Hilfenhaus was overlooked for the recent Ashes tour it appeared the selectors may have decided to move on from the 30-year-old paceman.

It was a huge blow to the burly Tasmanian, considering he had taken 44 Test wickets at an average of 21 in his previous 10 Tests and had been the leading wicket-taker in the 2009 Ashes in England.

Hilfenhaus, Peter Siddle, Ryan Harris, Mitchell Johnson, Josh Hazlewood, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Clint McKay and Chadd Sayers have been identified by Australian management as key quicks competing for spots this summer, cricinfo.com reported.

Mitchell Starc has been ruled out of the upcoming Ashes, while James Pattinson and Jackson Bird both have had injury setbacks.

Last summer, Hilfenhaus battled manfully against a prodigiously-talented South African batting line-up on two extremely flat pitches at Brisbane and Adelaide, claiming six wickets at 35.

He was rested for the final Test of that series, along with Peter Siddle, after the pair bowled themselves into the ground trying to secure a victory at Adelaide.

Hilfenhaus then suffered a side strain early in the first Test against Sri Lanka at Hobart and was ruled out of the rest of that series.

He made a strong return to first-class cricket in the New Year, finishing with 26 wickets at 24 in the Sheffield Shield for Tasmania.

I recently assessed Australia’s pace options for the Ashes in a piece for The Roar and named the six quicks I favoured – Peter Siddle, Ryan Harris, James Pattinson, Jackson Bird, James Faulkner and Chadd Sayers.

When I re-read the article after it was published I found myself thinking, “Sayers instead of Hilfenhaus? Why?” Both players perform the same role as swing bowling backups.

Pattinson’s recent concession that he will likely miss a chunk of the Ashes this summer because of his back complaint makes Hilfenhaus an even more attractive proposition.

With injury concerns surrounding Pattinson and Harris, that leaves Siddle as the only first choice quick whose health is not a significant concern.

Hilfenhaus provides insurance as an experienced, dependable replacement should either Harris or Siddle get injured before Pattinson returns.

I asked myself the question whether, in such a scenario, I would rather Mitchell Johnson, Faulkner, Sayers or Hilfenhaus as the third quick to partner Harris/Siddle and Bird.

Johnson is a roll of the dice as it’s impossible to predict at which end of the spectrum his performance will lie.

To my mind, he should be considered as a WACA specialist only.

Sayers, meanwhile, would offer almost exactly the same product as Hilfenhaus yet at a slower pace and without the experience of having taken 99 Test wickets at 28.

He is undoubtedly talented but in the searing pressure of a big series I would rather call on a veteran than a debutant.

It must be said that Hilfenhaus has a very mixed Ashes record.

He went from being the leading wicket taker on either side in the 2009 series to cannon fodder in the 2010-11 contest.

His return of 22 wickets at an average of 27 in the 2009 Ashes has seemingly been wiped from the memories of many cricket followers.

That is not surprising given how ineffectual he was in the following Ashes down under when he took just seven wickets at 59 over four Tests.

Hilfenhaus did not spray the ball around and gift England easy boundaries in that series – his economy rate of 2.62 runs per over was bettered only by England’s Tim Bresnan (2.6) among the top 10 wicket takers.

He was, however, utterly toothless. His trademark late swing was absent and his pace and carry were noticeably down.

There was something wrong – he did not look the same bowler he had been before or indeed the one he has been after.

It later emerged Hilfenhaus had battled with knee tendonitis and rib soreness which had affected his action and reduced his pace that summer.

But since that horror series, Hilfenhaus has taken 44 Test wickets at 21 in his 10 Tests, as noted above.

At 30 years old, he may still have two to three years left in him to compete at the top level.

Considering the frailty of Australia’s quicks, particularly veteran spearhead Ryan Harris and gifted youngsters James Pattinson, Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins, he remains a valuable backup.

While the bodies of that young trio mature in the next few years Australia have the luxury of calling upon a veteran with an impressive Test record. They should do so.

The Crowd Says:

2013-10-22T10:13:22+00:00

Clavers

Guest


His form in the series against India in Australia was outstanding. If he can reproduce that he can justify his spot in any team.

2013-10-18T06:36:11+00:00

A punter

Guest


@ Brian, Cutting has one the best fc records in the country even better than Ryan Harris. His batting is a bonus.

2013-10-18T02:26:58+00:00

A punter

Guest


+1. His strike rate says it all.

2013-10-18T02:25:26+00:00

A punter

Guest


Yes!

2013-10-18T02:24:21+00:00

A punter

Guest


Only because he has picked up a lot of wickets against poor performing teams. Surely we should be looking at recent form and based on that I do not rate him in the best ten bowers in the country. Please check the first class bowling stats.

2013-10-18T02:20:17+00:00

A punter

Guest


Hilfenhaus has a first class average of 28.55 and a strike rate of 57.9 Cutting has a first class average of 24.77 and a strike rate of 43.8 Ryan Harris who is widely regarded as the best strike bowler in the country has an average of 26.48 and a strike rate of 53.3 So why isn't Cutting in the team with this outstanding record? When you also consider his batting ability, it is absolutely mind boggling.

2013-10-15T22:04:57+00:00

Nicko

Guest


He was injured in the IPL. Selectors even indicated they would have taken him if he wasn't

2013-10-15T12:31:34+00:00

Nakul Gureja

Roar Rookie


Given how Johnson is bowling at the moment, i guess he will make it in along with Harris and Siddle (Watto 4th Bowler and hopefully Lyon) and Johnson/ Hilfy/ Siddle trio does not give a feel good factor to be honest.

2013-10-15T11:31:18+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


It's always fun to play with the ICC Test predictor. http://www.icc-cricket.com/rankings/rankings-predictor/test You can probably get Australia down to about 7th if you try really hard! Pakistan are currently all over the Saffers.

AUTHOR

2013-10-15T11:07:41+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hazlewood did bowl well in Africa but aside from that he hasn't done enough at FC level to justify the hype.

AUTHOR

2013-10-15T11:06:30+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Absolutely jameswm and when he doesn't swing it many of those balls sliding across the right hander get carved to the boundary.

AUTHOR

2013-10-15T11:04:32+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hookin' what do you think of Bailey? It's hard to tell.

AUTHOR

2013-10-15T11:03:10+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I don't bet but if I did I'd gladly give you those odds.

AUTHOR

2013-10-15T10:37:34+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Gulbis is a strange one...he was a top order batsman in Victoria before moving to Tasmania aged about 24 and is now playing for them mainly as a pace bowler.

AUTHOR

2013-10-15T10:30:43+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Cutting is certainly not a swing bowler but he gets enough movement off the pitch and occasionally through the air to beat the batsman. He gets sharp bounce, is quick enough to hurry the batsman at a consistent pace around 140kmh and is one of those bowlers who has a knack of making breakthroughs as suggested by his first-class strike rate of 43, which is sensational. My only issue with him is that he can leak runs at times which is why I have him behind a fair few other guys.

2013-10-15T09:57:32+00:00

Manoj

Guest


Praveen good points, we need to give our younger batsman a longer go and not make the mistakes of the 80s. Noticed Khawaja top scorred again in the Ryobi with a 60 odd and full credit to Tasmania for pulling a victory. Gulbis looks like a good find for Tasmania and i haven't seen too much of him today but liked what i saw today. Khawaja continued his good form from last game and is doing what he should to get back in the Aussie side and looked a class above today as well. Great to see Rhino back in action because we need him for the ashes. Rose will benefit from his move to Tasmania.

2013-10-15T09:42:08+00:00

Chrisb

Guest


Alderman had two absolutely brilliant Ashes tours, but also some very poor series, such as Windies tour in 83/4. Johnson had a great year and a half. Why so critical of one but not the other? It's easy to romanticise the past

2013-10-15T08:52:52+00:00

Showbags

Guest


I don't understand what people see in Cutting. He doesn't swing the ball one little bit. He is not super quick. Yes he is reasonably accurate and has a decent effort ball but I don't think that's enough to worry international batsmen consistently. You either have to swing the ball, be super accurate with good bounce, or have serious pace to make it in Test Cricket imo. Cutting has none of these things. I think he could do a good job in ODI Cricket but I'm definitely not sold on his Test credentials.

2013-10-15T08:46:41+00:00

Hookin' YT

Guest


England batted 7 times in 2010/11 and Hussey made 570 as a bulwark. Australia has nothing this time.

2013-10-15T08:43:23+00:00

Hookin' YT

Guest


This is Noveau Australis. Bailey and Johnson...roll out the barrel. They deserve a flogging. In fact if Pakistan makes inroads and Australia is ranked 5th, hows the Test championship Suthers?

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