Who is Australia's next gloveman?

By Francis Curro / Roar Pro

As Brad Haddin moves into his late 30s, it’s time to be thinking about the next Australian wicketkeeper.

Matthew Wade was recently dropped for Haddin in the 2013 Ashes series. The selectors said they wanted to bring in experience as Haddin was named vice captain.

With the Sheffield Shield up and running, state wicket keepers that will be eying the Test spot in a few years time.

There are three major contenders and one future prospect.

Matthew Wade
The obvious choice for Haddin’s replacement. Has spent the last year as Australia’s number one keeper, only to be dropped for the more experienced Brad Haddin.

Wade is the best batsman of the wicket keepers in the country. He has a first class average of around 40 and has scored two Test hundreds in tough situations. He was also almost selected during the 2013 Ashes series as a batsman.

The biggest downside however, is his glove work. Australia should be looking at select the best glove man, who is also skilled with the bat. There is no point averaging mid 40s if you are dropping catches and missing stumpings.

Whether it was nerves, Wade’s keeping has been his biggest let down at Test cricket.

He is scoring runs at state cricket, and is continuing to improve his glove work. If he can get some solid scores and keep well this summer, he will be well on his way.

Tim Paine
At almost 30 years old, it is now or never for Tim Paine.

Paine is a quality glove man and four years ago he almost took over Haddin as the country’s best keeper.

He is an exceptional leader and a talented gleeman.

The only thing holding Paine back is his first class batting records.

He has only one hundred at 31.61.

He has a better List A record and seems to be a good finisher in limited overs cricket.

He had a solid Ryobi Cup campaign, where he scored two fifties and was generally in on his own at the end.

His injuries have been a major factor in not getting selected.

A few years ago he was being talked about as the countries next captain, now he is just finding his feet in Shield cricket again.

I would love to see Paine back in the baggy green, but he will have to have a great summer to progress ahead of Wade.

Chris Hartley
Arguably the best glove man in the country. Has got a young McDermott breathing down his neck, but is an important part of Queensland’s side.

He isn’t the best wicketkeeper batsman in the country, but his glove work has been sublime for a few seasons now.

In 2009-2010 Hartley won the Shield player of the year after scoring over 700 runs.

Hartley is now over 30 and age is going against him. However if he keeps his glove work at the top level, the selectors could come knocking.

Sam Whiteman
Whiteman is still only 21 years old, but has shown some signs he can keep and bat.

In West Australia’s first Shield match of the season, he kept well and is currently keeping Tom Triffitt out of the WACA XI.

Whiteman was also quite impressive during the during the champions league with an unbeaten 51 in his only game. He has a bright future.

Currently there are a few good wicketkeepers floating around the country. Wade is still the frontrunner, but Paine will now start to knock on the door. It will be interesting to see who the selectors pick next.

The Crowd Says:

2013-11-19T11:28:57+00:00

Josie

Guest


Don't dismiss Tom Triffitt, He may not be getting an opportunity with WA but if he can consistently get some runs on the board and display the wicket keeping skills that have got him this far he's got to be in with a chance over next few years. If not WA other states should keep an eye on him

2013-11-06T00:10:59+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


No doubt that was a simple chance that most club keepers would have taken. With Hartley it was a shock, with Wade it would have been expected.

2013-11-05T22:22:42+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


Hartley looks the best keeper in the country right now, so if that holds up he should get the Test spot. He should already have it. From the little I've seen of him, Ludeman looks to already be the next best. I suspect that it will be Wade though. The selectors seem to have made that call and are likely to stay with it, with Paine the back-up but he is not the player he promised to become or even the keeper he was pre-injury. Wade has such basic faults that it is difficult to see him becoming a high standard keeper, but the role seems to be his anyway.

AUTHOR

2013-11-05T07:07:40+00:00

Francis Curro

Roar Pro


With Wade playing domestic cricket, his wicket-keeping days will be numbered. Promising prospect though.

2013-11-05T05:53:53+00:00

SWANNY

Guest


Paine or Hartley for me, Just make sure its not Wade, dont know how he gets a game. Even Hughes kept better than him

2013-11-04T18:43:47+00:00

Bearfax

Guest


Bert Oldfield ? Wally Grout?

2013-11-04T16:26:26+00:00

kurt

Guest


peter handscomb?

2013-11-03T10:00:40+00:00

Widget

Roar Guru


Peter nevill is a gun, plus he has age on his side unlike the rest of them.

AUTHOR

2013-11-03T07:33:40+00:00

Francis Curro

Roar Pro


Zampa and Boyce are still a few years away I would think. Agar will most likely get selected before them because he is experienced and can bat. The selectors will stick with Lyon this summer, hopefully they start playing him in the ODI as well ( do not know why he doesn't play ODIs?)

AUTHOR

2013-11-03T07:31:19+00:00

Francis Curro

Roar Pro


I think Hartley will get the call up before Ludeman does. He is a better keeper and a more developed batsman. Ludeman was quite good in the BBl actually.

AUTHOR

2013-11-03T07:28:43+00:00

Francis Curro

Roar Pro


I think Lyon should be the ODI spinner, or bring Ahmed back.

2013-11-03T01:21:33+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


Don't think so. Anyone can choose the same username as already exists. It may not be trolling, it may be coincidence. I used to use "chris" as my username and one thread was chaos with two of us holding diametrically opposed views - it confused me, let alone anyone else.

2013-11-03T01:16:14+00:00

davros

Guest


My vote would be Paine..i have a feeling the selectors agree with me as well....I dont know what to make of that ? Does thatmean that I am complately clueless ?

2013-11-03T01:10:03+00:00

davros

Guest


yep that is a bit sad to see ...I used to visit a site that was completely and hopelessly infected with TROLLS...it was funny for a while ...but just ended up being a waste of time and it go quite nasty ...I hope the roar has systems in place

2013-11-03T00:32:33+00:00

Dan Ced

Guest


What about Ludeman? Seems Paine is next up, being in Aus A, but you never know.

2013-11-02T14:25:32+00:00

Varun

Guest


I did not write the above comment, someone is trying to write as me to discredit me, no doubt I am big fan of khawaja but he is no keeper, Paine or wade for me as next in lonnie

2013-11-02T14:13:05+00:00

Hookin' YT

Guest


Can't keep tadpoles. Go down the local park ans you'll see more competent glovemen.

2013-11-02T13:39:14+00:00

Gav13

Guest


Some of the results from this round would suggest that the spinners are starting to come back into the game Francis. 7 wickets for Boyce, 6 for Ahmed, a combined 6 for Lyon and O'Keefe, 4 for Clive Rose and even Cameron White and Nathan Hauritz chimed in with a few each. Obviously too early in the season to call it, but there's some positive signs that the state captains are becoming more aggressive with the idea of using spin to craft wickets. On the topic of spin, how in the world Xavier Doherty is our ODI spinner I will never understand.

2013-11-02T13:37:45+00:00

Jammel

Guest


Wade for mine. Quality batsmen and keeping will improve.

AUTHOR

2013-11-02T13:26:28+00:00

Francis Curro

Roar Pro


Most of the spinners don't get a bowl in domestic cricket, so the batsman don't learn. Thats why Fawad Ahmed is being looked at, always taking wickets.

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