How many all-rounders does Australia want for the World Cup?

By Brett McKay / Expert

While the Australian team hierarchy have been quite smart about resting our Ashes heroes over the last few weeks, the door has also been opened for some young players to come into the one-day side and show their wares on the national stage.

Some of them, like James Faulkner, have made every post in a winner when getting the rare outing away from the water bottles and into the actual playing XI.

I even went as far as saying on Friday night – well before the final onslaught, I might add – that young James might have given us a new verb; that is, that England were ‘Faulknered’ at the ‘Gabba.

Others, like Nathan Coulter-Nile perhaps, have had the odd moment – like Sunday – but haven’t quite allowed themselves to relax enough to show us what they can really do.

Nevertheless, in thinking about all this over the weekend, something fairly obvious stuck out: the Australian selectors, when thinking about a team for the coloured gear, are trying to find 11 allrounders.

Seriously. In the first two one-dayers, we’re already seen Shane Watson, Glenn Maxwell, Faulkner, and Coulter-Nile in action. Dan Christian was brought into the squad to extend Watson’s well-earned break, and played on Sunday in Sydney.

Christian’s form for Brisbane in the BBL has been good, especially with the bat, and I had little doubt he would play once he was brought in.

He’s clearly in the one-day plans going forward, and so this was the perfect chance to see how he goes against one of the better one-day sides in the world, even if they’re not at the top of their game at the moment.

And that move was justified well and truly, with Christian bowling an excellent spell toward the end of the England innings to finish with 2/52, only blown out with his last over costing 16 runs.

So that’s five allrounders in the last ten days. That’d be enough, right?

Well, I’m not so sure about that.

Sitting on the fringe, surely, must be Steven Smith and Cameron White.

Now, sure, I’m probably extending the definition of ‘allrounder’ a touch by including these two, but whatever we or they think of their bowling right now, they do remain genuine bowling options.

Smith’s form with the bat, in the field, and his captaincy have all been from the top draw since resuming his BBL post with the Sydney Sixers after the completion of the successful Ashes campaign. He got his Australian start in the limited overs formats, and a recall surely can’t be far off.

In fact, it’s closer than that obviously, with Smith called in as cover for George Bailey’s groin injury for Sunday’s third one-dayer.

White, in the words of Australian coach Darren Lehmann, is “very close” to a national recall, and he may well be in the batting purple patch of his life. In all forms this Australian summer, White has amassed more than 1100 runs at better than 54, and with a century and 11 50s. And it’s still January, remember.

I don’t think it’s too big a stretch to suggest had Sunday’s game been played in Melbourne, instead of Sydney, it quite likely would’ve been White called in on standby for Bailey.

Regardless, he’s definitely in the frame, and his recall to the Australian Twenty20 side would seem to confirm that.

Mitchell Marsh might not be as close as Smith and White right at this point, but he is going pretty well for the Perth Scorchers now he’s returned to fitness. He did also play three games at the ICC Champions Trophy in England in June last year.

Marsh could be a smokey for the Australian squad to Bangladesh for the World Twenty20, in March, and from there you just never know. There actually isn’t a lot of cricket for the Australian side over the next six months or so.

So with the five allrounders we’ve seen in these last few games, and the three more I’ve named here, that’s now a total of eight.

Nine, if we throw Mitchell Johnson into the mix, which we nearly have to do, for the same reasons used to include Smith and White.

Add Michael Clarke and David Warner to this list – who have both bowled this summer, if we really want to push it – and the all-round batting and ‘keeping of Brad Haddin, and suddenly there’s a matchday 12.

Warner, Watson, White, Clarke, Smith, Maxwell, Haddin, Marsh, Faulkner, Christian, Johnson, Coulter-Nile.

It’s just crazy enough to work.

Do I think that’s where we’re heading? No, not really.

But in a World Cup squad, it wouldn’t surprise me if there’s anywhere up four or five allrounders of the genuine kind, and even another three or four or five of the ‘might be stretching it’ kind.

Certainly, the selectors are trying to build a squad chock full of options, and that’s not a bad thing if Australia are to become just the second country to win a World Cup on home soil.

The Crowd Says:

2014-01-22T09:59:23+00:00

Matt Sterne

Roar Rookie


Having the riches of plenty of all-rounders only makes us stronger, right? Guys like Watson and Maxwell earn a place for their batting along. The others (Faulkner, Johnson) are bowling all rounders. The rest will most likely miss out on a place in the top team. MAYBE one more might slip in... It's an embarrassment of riches right now!

2014-01-22T09:58:40+00:00

Matt Sterne

Roar Rookie


trev - meet Glen Maxwell and James Faulkner.

2014-01-22T07:09:47+00:00

trev

Guest


Pick as many as you want. Get back to us when you find a Corey Anderson. This kid is a machine.

AUTHOR

2014-01-22T02:17:39+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


You're not suggesting Starc is an allrounder, surely?

2014-01-22T01:51:15+00:00

Chop

Roar Guru


No it's not, you have to get out to have an average....technically it's infinite....

2014-01-22T01:50:30+00:00

Chop

Roar Guru


It has apparently worked for Shaun Marsh in the test space....

2014-01-22T01:33:35+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Although, you could say that Faulkner, while in the team as a bowling allrounder, has shone with the bat, but really not been that good with the ball being basically the most expensive of the Australian bowlers so far in the series. He's not quite as bad as Cutting who's somehow got a T20 call-up despite being in the team as a bowler who can hit the ball well in the lower order, where he's been woefully out of form with the ball in the BBL, but he's been one of the weak links with the ball in this series. Hopefully he can improve there, because if he's in the team he's likely to bowl most of his 10 overs in most games, but have the opportunity to win a game with the bat only occasionally. So his bowling is where he really needs to work extra hard.

2014-01-22T01:29:44+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Also, I think the BBL has helped that. In the past, the state level players weren't so well known outside those who keep good track of state cricket, and even for many of them they only know their name from a scoresheet, not from actually seeing them play, and resting a bunch of the main players meant people turning up to matches and finding that the team was full of all these players they'd never heard of rather than the ones they paid their money to see. So when they hit the one day matches and guys like Finch, Maxwell, Coulter-Nile and co. rock up to play, they crowd have been watching these players smash the ball around in the BBL and are probably just as excited to see them play for Australia as the players who they might have otherwise expected to see.

2014-01-22T01:22:03+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


They never said they wouldn't rotate players in limited overs matches, just not test matches. And with a T20 World Cup in a couple of months and a 50-over world cup next summer, they need to give opportunities to more of these guys to work towards those World Cups.

2014-01-22T01:19:11+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


I must admit I was pretty surprised by Cutting's selection. His bowling has just not been up to it this summer and for a player who is in a team first and foremost as a bowler that's just not good enough. You want to make sure at least some of your bowlers have some batting ability, especially six-hitting ability, but they've still got to make the side on the quality of their bowling, and Cutting just doesn't cut-it at the moment.

2014-01-22T00:02:49+00:00

aussie1st

Roar Pro


Pretty sure Starc will be in the mix, he was killing it with the white ball.

2014-01-21T08:55:00+00:00

Swampy

Guest


T20 teams should be made up of 6-7 all rounders. They need to be superb fielders/athletes as well. The format suits. -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2014-01-21T08:46:45+00:00

Beauty of a geek brains of a bimbo(atgm)

Guest


Yay sounds cool mate!

AUTHOR

2014-01-21T05:54:11+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


"Maxwelled" I said at the time, after he tempted fate by playing a fourth (and ridiculous) reverse pull shot..

2014-01-21T04:52:58+00:00

Beauty of a geek brains of a bimbo(atgm)

Guest


Faulknered if aus wins and what was the other one brett?coulter niled?

AUTHOR

2014-01-21T04:46:46+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


I reckon that will be pretty close James..

2014-01-21T04:08:20+00:00

jammel

Guest


Ultimately, you have Watson as a must. Faulkner and Maxwell as maybes for the World Cup at this stage. I really don't think Christian or Mitch Marsh are in contention for our best XI. Nor Agar, McDonald, Henriques, etc. If we had a squad of 15 for the World Cup I would nominate the following (3 "all rounders"): Warner Finch Watson Clarke Bailey Maxwell Haddin Faulkner Johnson Harris Lyon Smith Starc McKay Pattinson Shaun Marsh, Wade and Doherty in the background in case needed.

2014-01-21T02:33:57+00:00

Bruce Reid

Guest


AUTHOR

2014-01-21T01:41:14+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Completely agree Sheek, and I suppose that's the underlying point I'm making here, in highlighting just how many all-rounders are in use currently..

AUTHOR

2014-01-21T01:39:07+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


I couldn't help it if we chased down a low score!!

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