My Australia A team for England match

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Uncertainty surrounding the Aussie team for the first Ashes Test may well be cleared up by Australia A’s match against England in just over two weeks.

But which players should get the opportunity to push their case for Test selection in this match?

The four-day encounter at Hobart starting on November 6 coincides with the second round of the Sheffield Shield competition.

Two positions in the Test side are up for grabs. The selectors must identify a middle order batsman and a quick to take the new ball with Ryan Harris in the Ashes opener.

David Warner’s grip on his opening position was tenuous after horrid tours of England and India, which have seen him average 24 in his past seven Tests.

However by striking three commanding tons in the space of a week in the Ryobi Cup, he likely will have allayed any fears the selectors harboured about his touch.

This would be my Australia A side:

1. Mark Cosgrove
2. Jordan Silk
3. Alex Doolan
4. Usman Khawaja
5. George Bailey (capt.)
6. Nic Maddinson
7. Tim Paine
8. Ashton Agar
9. Mitchell Johnson
10. Ben Hilfenhaus
11. Jackson Bird

Tasmanian Cosgrove has bolted into Ashes calculations after reportedly losing 16kg in the off season.

Since relocating from South Australia, he has shown his versatility by transforming from an audacious middle-order stroke maker to a far more circumspect opener.

He has also demonstrated his ability to make tough runs on the bowler-friendly deck at Bellerive Oval.

Due to Warner’s resurgence of form, Cosgrove now appears to be competing with Bailey, Khawaja, Maddinson, Doolan, Phil Hughes and Shaun Marsh for the vacant middle order role.

His State teammate Jordan Silk would be my choice as his opening partner in this match.

A composed and patient accumulator of runs, Silk, 21, is the young Australian batsman seemingly best equipped for success in first-class cricket.

Having played only five first-class matches, he should be left to develop at State level.

This match should be used to offer him valuable experience against a quality international attack, rather than as an opportunity to press for an Ashes berth.

Maddinson should be viewed in the same light. He appears too green and should not be considered for Test cricket until he develops a better balance between attack and defence.

However, I would like to see how he would handle this standard of competition.

Khawaja, meanwhile, acquitted himself well against the quicks in England, scoring 60 runs for just one dismissal against James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Tim Bresnan.

The Queenslander is a gifted player of pace, which will be England’s main weapon in this series given the way in which the Australia conditions will hamper off spinner Graeme Swann, who troubled Khawaja in the recent series.

Doolan’s impressive efforts in the Shield last summer should also earn him a crack at the Poms in this warm up match.

The Tasmanian is an elegant, technically-correct batsman, who is well suited to the longest form of the game.

His Tigers teammate Bailey, who is quickly becoming a polarising figure, has gone some way to making amends for his awful Shield season last summer by dominating in One day Internationals for Australia.

It should be remembered that prior to debuting in ODIs, Bailey was an ordinary 50-over player, averaging in the low 30s at State level.

He has since displayed the invaluable capacity to take his game to another level once exposed to international cricket.

The most pertinent question is could he replicate that feat in Tests?

The obvious omission from my batting line-up is Phil Hughes.

At just 24 years old, with 21 first-class centuries to his name, Hughes may still become a valuable Test player for Australia.

However, he currently has significant flaws in his approaches to combating both spin and pace, which must be addressed before he is provided any further opportunities in the baggy green.

Tim Paine gets the nod as wicket keeper ahead of Chris Hartley in a tight decision. Either player would be worthy of the spot.

The fact Paine, at two-and-a-half years younger, can still potentially play for five or six years earns him the position ahead of 31-year-old Hartley.

The role of taking the new ball with Harris at the Gabba should be decided in a shootout between Jackson Bird, Mitchell Johnson and Ben Hilfenhaus.

Johnson is too erratic and mentally-fragile for my liking but, regardless, seems to be a very strong candidate to play at Brisbane.

For that reason I would like him to be tested first against England’s accomplished and experienced batting line-up.

Bird or Hilfenhaus would be my favoured options to partner Harris due to their ability to take advantage of the typically swing-friendly conditions at the Gabba.

The former had a poor tour of England, due to his inability to curve the Dukes ball. But his capacity to swing the Kookaburra is not in doubt.

Hilfenhaus, meanwhile, has seemingly been forgotten by the Aussie selectors after a stellar comeback to Test cricket in 2011 and 2012.

With 99 Test wickets at an average of 28, his pedigree earns him a crack at an Ashes berth.

The Crowd Says:

2013-10-29T18:22:18+00:00

Scouser92

Guest


Stuart Meaker is the quickest bowler in England. He's been clocked at 97mph. (Surrey Website)

2013-10-29T18:21:34+00:00

Scouser92

Guest


It wasn't over 96, it was 94 mph.

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T15:55:15+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


The best we can hope is they are competitive and don't allow some of the Eng guys down on form easy, confidence building runs. But that will be hard work given that understrength attack.

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T15:52:59+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


You must be stoked about your man Klinger...the hopes live on!

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T15:51:39+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


That is the balancing act I suppose...giving the contenders enough time to stake a claim without hampering your locked-in players too much.

2013-10-29T12:50:25+00:00

Robbo

Guest


Who on earth thinks that any Aus A side has a chance of beating England in a 4 day game on a flat deck, irrespective of who the selectors pick! If our best team can't do it in 5 tests recently, why would Aus A do it, seriously?

2013-10-29T12:47:22+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


I think you'd find they would have trouble picking a batting lineup with first class averages better than the '30s in Australian first class cricket at the moment.

2013-10-29T12:41:15+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


If he got four single figure scores in the Shield they might reconsider, but since they picked him there for the last two tests in England just weeks after telling him to try out being in the middle order, I'm pretty sure they'd want to give him a few more tests at least opening to have a chance to settle in and score some runs.

2013-10-29T12:05:01+00:00

expathack

Guest


Nudge, I think we must view the game differently. To me cricket at that level is mental as much as anything else. These guys are facing their own attack in the nets everyday, time out in the middle after a layoff is all about building confidence. And England were high on confidence after the 3 nil drubbing. But there's the slightest of doubts in there in that they haven't played for a few months. They need to reassure themselves they're still where they were at 2 months ago. If they turn up and pound a weak team, one that's supposedly representing Australia, any doubts they may have had are gone. Its just back to business as usual, hammering Australia. If they were to turn up, be a bit rusty and have an Australian XI give it to them, those doubts start creeping in. You just have to see the way Harmison burst the Hughes bubble in the 2009 English Lions match to see the value of getting at opposition players early. And what about the confidence of those few fringe players in the oz side? How much work is Cutting going to have to do in that bizzare attack!!! More likely than not he's just going to get bowled into the ground and carted. It's set up to be the ultimate confidence builder for what'll be a slightly rusty English team. Score some cheap runs, get some cheap wickets, bash an Australian XI.

2013-10-29T11:45:23+00:00

Dan Ced

Guest


If you take the averages of this batting lineup in the past 12 months and pit it again the current AUS team, the Aus A team would probably come out on top.

2013-10-29T11:30:38+00:00

Dan Ced

Guest


Seems they stuck with a fair few Aus A incumbent members from the past tour, Maddinson/Sayers missed out of course but they have Shield matches. Nobody really misses out. If you look at the list Henriques is the only guy not in notable form... maybe Ferguson but he has been in India not getting game time. Copeland and Klinger had dominant county seasons, Klinger, Khawaja, Holland, Cutting, and Paine had great Ryobi cups Doolan and Marsh are possibly questionable given recent consistency... but both were in the last Aus A tour, so they have extended their faith in them for this game.

2013-10-29T11:10:43+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


Hussey batted beautifully the first three Tests, till the strain of trying to carry the whole side (understandably) became too much. But there's the tactic right there. A four man attack with Swann only works if Swann does the defensive job (his primary role in Australia). When he's attacked it creates a problem.

2013-10-29T11:05:51+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


He was clocked at over 96mph in the warm up against England for Essex. He's wild and raw, but 'kinell he's quick!

2013-10-29T11:02:31+00:00

Nudge

Guest


But then that means that 3 of there test players will miss that game. Considering the chairmans 11 is weak, that would leave them with only one decent hit out before Brisbane. Not the best preparation considering most of there team hasn't played since the last ashes test

2013-10-29T10:49:24+00:00

John

Guest


I went to school with Jordan Silk and he is not a tool. He and I played Aussie Rules together and he was pretty damn good but he was always more interested in cricket.

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T10:29:16+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Eng still need to decide on the number 6 spot and their 3rd quick so they may well play all of Finn, Tremlett, Rankin, Ballance and Stokes.

2013-10-29T10:27:54+00:00

Nudge

Guest


They will be facing Cutting at 135-140, henriques at 130, Copeland 125 on probably a dry slow wicket. Come first test they will be facing Watson 135-140 , siddle 140-145 , Harris 140 -147 and Johnson 145-150 on a quick bouncy gabba wicket. Not the best preparation in my opinion

2013-10-29T10:26:40+00:00

Matt Morgan

Roar Rookie


Why on earth have they limited selection for Australia A to two players from a particular state? The idea is to beat England and dent their confidence is it not? CA appear to have forgotten this fact. Australia A is a representative team and if 8 of the best players are from one state, so be it. The state teams are there to provide players for the national side and that should be the priority.

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T10:25:52+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Yeah it wouldn't surprise me to see him get an opportunity in the next year or so.

2013-10-29T10:10:39+00:00

Ken Hambling

Guest


I think it will Ronan

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