My Australian team for the Gabba

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

For reasons perhaps best known to Cricket Australia’s marketing department, the squad for the opening Ashes Test will be named this Tuesday – nine days prior to the Gabba match getting underway and a day before the commencement of the third round of Sheffield Shield fixtures.

So in effect, all players have placed their credentials before the selectors with changes after Tuesday only as a result of injury.

And speaking of injury, the one big question mark remains over Shane Watson, although he is expected to recover from a low-grade hamstring strain incurred during Australia’s last one-dayer at Bangalore week.

To begin with, let’s assume he is a starter and as such he will slot in at number three where he made a Test-best 176 in Australia’s last Test at The Oval in September – a knock that ended a 47-innings century drought.

Given his injury is to his leg, if he is declared fit enough to sprint between the wickets while batting, he is likely to be able to bowl as well, a commodity ideally needed for team balance.

The fact that he will not play in this week’s Shield encounter means he will arrive in Brisbane with no immediate exposure to a red ball in match conditions – not an ideal preparation.

If fit, ahead of him in the order will be Chris Rogers and David Warner who have both shown that they are in excellent touch.

Rogers completed a fine match double for Victoria against New South Wales yesterday with innings of 88 and 117.

Once again his cool head and experience will be sorely required at the top of the order.

In the same match, Warner peeled off rapid fire innings of 104 (87) and 51no (45) on the back of a dominant Ryobi Cup campaign, which included three centuries, the best of which was 197, also against the Vics.

Skipper Michael Clarke has dispelled fears that his degenerative back complaint would rule him out of the first Test.

Likely to bat at number four, he and the selectors will be hoping that his input with the willow sets the tone for Australia’s batting throughout the series.

He has turned out for both the Blues’ first two Shield encounters for returns of 88, 7 and 43.

Steve Smith, like Watson, is coming off a century at The Oval however in his case it was a breakthrough innings, his maiden Test hundred.

After four half-centuries in the Ryobi Cup he has continued to impress in Shield ranks with scores of 42, 63 and 107 through the first two rounds.

As was the case in England, he is likely to be called upon to roll out some of his leggies.

The number six slot has been the subject of intense debate in the lead-up to the opening Test.

For mine, I think it will go to national one-day and T20 skipper, George Bailey.

Given his commitments leading the ODI team in India – where he scored 478 runs at 95.6 – he has played just the one Shield match for scores of 34 and 41 against Queensland.

He will be disappointed that he didn’t convert those starts into three-figure scores but I think he is a near certainty to make his Test debut at Brisbane.

He has displayed a cool head at international limited-overs level, and despite a poor Shield season last year, he seems the most likely candidate.

Brad Haddin will be the number seven – in his 50th Test – coming off a world-record 29 dismissals in the last Ashes series.

His batting efforts were modest in England with just 206 runs at 22.9 and at 36 years of age another lean series with the blade may open the door for a resurgent Tim Paine, who has been mentioned by NSP chairman John Inverarity recently as being well and truly back in the mix.

Now to the fast bowlers, who I think will be Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ryan Harris.

Johnson (205 Test wickets in 51 matches) is coming off good performances of late in England and India where he tickled 150km/h quite regularly, although more importantly, he bowled with far greater control – a combination that should see him recalled to the team.

His Shield performance for the Warriors against the Redbacks at the WACA Ground this past week produced figures of 2-74 and 3-88 – along with five dropped catches off his bowling.

His pace will be used to intimidate the England batsmen and he has the opportunity to upset the mindset of some of them, especially the lower order.

Siddle, who will turn 29 during the first Test, has been solid, if not spectacular, in his two Shield outings this season with 1-28, 2-39, 2-66 and 0-29 against NSW and WA.

He proved a valuable ally to Harris in England with 17 wickets at 31.6.

Harris though was the standout with the ball for Australia during the last Ashes series with 24 scalps at 19.6 after missing the first Test, giving him a world-class career record of 71 wickets at 22.3 in 16 Tests and a strike rate of 46.2.

He has proved to be a nemesis for England with his seven Tests to date resulting in 35 wickets at 21.4.

He is deceptively sharp with the ball seemingly skidding onto the batsman and his line is usually impeccable hence his good economy rate.

A fit Harris throughout the summer is imperative to the country’s hopes.

Nathan Lyon seems to be a lock for the spinning role with no other candidates presently threatening his status as the nation’s number one spinner.

Having been dropped and recalled during Australia’s last two Test series he will be hoping that his form secures a five-Test run against England this summer.

He picked up nine wickets at 33.7 in the last three Ashes Tests in England and to date has 85 wickets at 33.2 in 25 matches, respectable figures for an Australian offie.

In his two Shield matches this season he has taken 7-284 off 110 overs.

With Siddle, Harris, Johnson and Ben Hilfenhaus all being rested from this week’s Shield matches it appears that the Tasmanian will be named in the 12.

Almost a forgotten man in some fans’ eyes, a ground like the Gabba suits a swing bowler like Hilfenhaus perfectly.

He missed the majority of last summer through injury but he is a proven Test bowler with 99 wickets at 28.5 in 27 matches.

I don’t see him capturing his 100th wicket at Brisbane as I feel he will carry the drinks.

Now, what if Watson is ruled out through injury?

There are two options to replace him – an all-rounder or a specialist batsman.

James Faulkner is the only choice if the selectors want an all-rounder and his debut Test at The Oval last start was impressive – figures of 4-51 and 2-47 alongside innings of 23 and 22.

His first-class bowling figures are outstanding with his 138 wickets coming at just 22.6.

But his batting average is 30.0 and he has not been able to turn any of his eight half-centuries into a three-figure score.

Given it was the batting that caused most of Australia’s woes in England I think a specialist batsman would be the best option if Watson misses out – even though it will increase the bowlers’ workloads although Watson is likely to be fit anyway for the second Test.

Given Clarke’s reluctance to move up to number three and the fact that Bailey never bats that high at Shield level, the choice for me would be Alex Doolan.

While his overall first-class record is not stellar – he averages 39.2 – he has averaged 56 in his last 12 first-class matches including scores of 56 and 132 in Tasmania’s first Shield match of the season.

It is also worth noting that he made an unbeaten 166 last summer for Australia A against the touring South African outfit that fielded Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander.

Usman Khawaja’s stellar form in the Ryobi Cup has not been carried over to first-class ranks with his two innings this season producing just 8 and 3, putting him behind the eight ball.

So, there you have it.

My 12 for Brisbane
Rogers, Warner, Watson (or Doolan if Watson is injured), Clarke, Smith, Bailey, Haddin, Johnson, Siddle, Harris, Lyon, Hilfenhaus (12th man).

Over to you Roarers!

The Crowd Says:

2013-11-11T14:49:55+00:00

James

Guest


i wouldnt call johnson flakey in odi, hes always been at least decent. in tests then have at him, you cant really be too pessimistic but with odis hes at least solid

2013-11-11T14:48:53+00:00

James

Guest


yeah but looking at australia do you think they will still be batting after anderson has completed his initial spell? and the last 2 ashes series there have been 7 games with a result and of those 7 australia managed to get 20 wickets once.

2013-11-11T09:54:46+00:00

GD66

Guest


And he is scary to watch, just waiting for the strings to twang. I have mentioned before it does nobody any good to have Langer and Tub talking him up. In think it's now evident that Khawaja and Hughes have had enough chances without displaying the technique or application required. Bailey may not be the obvious answer, but I think his temperament and understanding of his responsibilities are still developing, and could well get his head down and have a good summer. They HAVE to play Faulkner at some stage, he is an impact player with improving skills. The timing of the team announcement is yet another bewildering call by Sutherland, Howard and co : can somebody explain to me just who these blokes are accountable to ? They seem to lurch from one ballsup to the next without being called out on anything.

AUTHOR

2013-11-11T08:35:35+00:00

Glenn Mitchell

Expert


I'm sorry Vish, but I cannot see what Shaun Marsh has fine in the last few years to warrant a Test recall.

AUTHOR

2013-11-11T08:33:21+00:00

Glenn Mitchell

Expert


Paul, in fairness to Alex Doolan he has averaged 56 in his past 12 first-class matches which is nearly twice Jordan Silk's career. One of his centuries -166no - came against Steyn and Philander in the AUS A game last season.

AUTHOR

2013-11-11T08:29:21+00:00

Glenn Mitchell

Expert


Agreed, I think Doolan is a Test player of the future. Also, don't discount Chris Rogers on the opening day - has a combination of experience and terrific current form.

2013-11-11T08:05:52+00:00

Vish

Guest


This would be my team for the first test at the Gabba Warner Rogers Doolan Marsh Clarke Smith Haddin Hilfenhaus Siddle Harris Lyon I wouldn't be going in with Watson as he s half fit and if he breaks down in the middle of this test it will hand over the psychological advantage and the ashes to England Lyon has been pretty steady n attacking well in his around the wicket line to right hander s. But is rendered ineffective by batsmen who are nimble footed like bell .In tat case Fawad could replacd him from the MCG Four bowlers and one partimer n Smith shud do. Only if the batsmen put up gud scores the bowlers are gonna get sonethin to bowl at. And for Watson the 176 he scored in the fifth test was not the full strength English bowlin attack and he struggles to death against gud in swing brutally exposed by a one Shami Ahmed in India

2013-11-11T06:39:28+00:00

Armchair Expert

Guest


Funny you mention Finch, Coverpoint, O'Keefe clean bowled him for a first ball duck in his last innings.

2013-11-11T06:30:03+00:00

Steele

Guest


With the juicier wickets like the Gabba and the Waca, I'd opt for Cameron White at six. Between him and Smith I think we'd have lyon more than covered with the spin bowling, and then it would allow room for Faulkner or Cutting, which in turn would improve our batting depth. Great fieldsman as well, something Lyon ain't!

2013-11-11T05:32:26+00:00

Bearfax

Guest


I think we're falling back on Johnson only because of so many injuries to our fast bowlers. In a year I suspect if Harris doesnt survive, the bowling options, barring injury and a serious drop in form, will be between Pattinson, Stark, Faulkner, Cummins and Sandhu. I think Lyon will hold onto his spin bowling position, ahead of Ahmed, Agar and Zampa

2013-11-11T05:16:18+00:00

mikeindarch

Guest


believe johnson is still the same inaccurate bowler of old he may have had 5 catches grassed but in the last two sessiond on wed he only got two balls past the bat, other than the short ones let go. we need bowlers who can bowl something to be better than the batsmen

2013-11-11T04:09:44+00:00

Alex

Guest


I believe Chris Lynn could be in contention. His last 4 innings he has made 50's in every innings and made 1 hundred.

2013-11-11T03:25:14+00:00

David

Guest


CA logical? No chance under current leadership.

2013-11-11T03:15:44+00:00

David

Guest


I'm a big fan of Bailey but I can't justify his selection as test batsman. Cam White offers more red ball form, is equal (if not better) fielder and bowls the odd leggie - which may or may not be of some use. Watson is a real risk in any 5 day game but with a niggle you'd have to think about holding him back. For me, Doolan comes in at 3. Trouble is the bowling then looks a bit thin with just Harris, Siddle and Lyon lock ins and either Johnston, Faulkner or Hilfie. Surely, they will go with Faulkner - who took 6/100 in his only test so far. What has he done wrong to be dropped?

2013-11-11T02:47:02+00:00

Timmy

Guest


I would agree that perhaps he needs to put together a big score in the shield and hopefully he can do that in the next round of matches. That being said he has scored 3 half centuries in 4 innings in the shield this year, the only other score being a respectable 46. A ton in the next round would have to have him firmly in the mix in my opinion

2013-11-11T02:40:37+00:00

davros

Guest


agree on hazelwood and agree on klinger...I don't mind s marsh ...I see something there that has not been unlocked ...not sure it ever will be ..but I see a touch of class combined with underachievement....Hauritz is a good bowler ...he fell out of favour and it was like he fell off a cliff

2013-11-11T02:35:06+00:00

davros

Guest


I would agree..needs to lose another 10 kgs at least

2013-11-11T01:44:13+00:00

Simon

Guest


Pattinson and Bird both have better first class (and Test) bowling averages than P-Diddle. Just stating the facts.

2013-11-11T01:01:03+00:00

MrKistic

Roar Rookie


So did Warne.

2013-11-11T00:58:29+00:00

Brisguy51

Roar Rookie


Yes ,im a Qlder but I think he should be given a chance especially in the form he is in and it is being played on his home deck.He went of the boil for a while for over a year,but he was injured and being young you have to expect some inconsistincies as they develop.If he fails,then send him back to SS to get some more runs,but if he does well then you have a long -term prospect for the side.

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