Bird takes wing to England to earn Ashes recall

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Jackson Bird has made a very wise choice. Unlike many fellow Aussie cricketers who shun county cricket in favour of either rest or lucrative T20 contracts, Bird has signed a three-month contract with Hampshire next year.

That stint will be crucial for Bird if he is to earn a spot in Australia’s Ashes squad for the tour of England.

On first glance, Bird appears tailor made for English conditions – a tall, accurate swing bowler capable of moving the ball off the seam.

The Tasmanian made his name by dismantling Sheffield Shield batting line-ups during an era in which his home ground Bellerive Oval sported a seaming deck not dissimilar to those often seen in England.

Yet he has laboured in the foreign conditions of the United Kingdom, both during last year’s Ashes tour and on a previous tour with Australia A. Across those two tours, he returned 15 wickets at an average of 40 from six first-class matches.

The problem? His inability to gain consistent swing with the Dukes cricket ball used in England.

It was noted during the Australia A tour of England in 2012 that he did not arc the Dukes ball through the air in the same dangerous manner he achieves with the more familiar Kookaburra. This was again evident in England last year amid a hugely disappointing tour for the Australians.

Bird had to wait until the fourth Test of the Ashes, with Australia already 2-0 down, before being given an opportunity. In that match at Chester-le-Street, Bird was tidy, as he always is, but lacked penetration due to the minimal swing he earned.

The 27-year-old, who is now on the comeback from his second back injury in the space of 12 months, simply must swerve the ball if he is to wedge his way back into the Australian Test line-up.

Australian coach Darren Lehmann has made it clear that he is most interested in paceman who can deliver the ball at 140-plus kilometres per hour. Lehmann sees unsettling pace as crucial to his ultra-aggressive strategy of using Australia’s fast bowlers in brief, venomous bursts.

Bird doesn’t fit this mould. While he can nudge the speed gun to 140 kilometres, he is patently more comfortable operating in the mid-130s.

This is a distinct disadvantage in the Lehmann era. The Aussie selectors may, however, make an exception for a genuine swing bowler capable of acting as a foil for the blood-thirsty offerings of the likes of Mitchell Johnson.

Such a selection appears most likely on English surfaces, which were lifeless during the last Ashes and unlikely to be any quicker next year given the threat posed to the home batsmen by Johnson.

On slower decks offering a bit of seam, Bird could come into the frame. The Ashes could be his first opportunity to get back into the Test team as, at this point, it seems unlikely he will feature in this summer’s four-Test series against India.

On hard home decks against the pace-shy Indian batting line-up, Australia will probably select their most intimidating fast men.

This makes Bird’s county move a sage one. He has never played in the county championship, although he was set to play for Northants this past English summer before he re-injured his back.

Bird will hope that a prolific Australian summer, followed by a successful stint at Hampshire, will propel him back into the Australian Test team.

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-19T01:29:59+00:00

Khan

Roar Rookie


Bird will be back strongly

2014-10-18T11:32:24+00:00

John

Roar Rookie


Ronan - this is contrary to your article earlier this week! Hahaha - no offense meant, although I thought it was relatively obvious given the Pakkies frailty against the left arm spinners of SL, that O'Keefe and Lyon would be given a nod. Was just praying the Big Show had an uneventful tour game (which he did). Interesting to see that Smith got a few overs, I don't think I am alone in saying that it would be great to develop that side of his game. The way things are going he could be an amazing total cricketer.

2014-10-18T11:30:02+00:00

John

Roar Rookie


Well said, I like Siddle but he just lacks penetration. Agreed sometimes he can get the ball to reverse (and quite late), but Siddle as we know him now (not dreaming backwards) is not in our top class of wicket takers.

2014-10-18T11:28:07+00:00

John

Roar Rookie


I don't like the idea of selecting bowlers to bowl "long spells". Select the bowlers most likely to take wickets. Harris, Johnson, Bird are my first three picked. Really hope his foray in the NH goes well. Obviously everyone knows about the bevvy of young quicks coming through which means a lot of good quicks won't get a game. M Starc? In 5 years would love to see Cummins, Pattinson, Starc, Hazlewood (attack led by Hazlewood) - I still think NCL and Sandhu can fit in there somewhere too, throw in Behrendorff and Paris and things get v confusing (some would include Cutting too).

2014-10-16T08:59:33+00:00

Statistic Skeptic

Roar Pro


Amen to that.

2014-10-16T08:53:44+00:00

Statistic Skeptic

Roar Pro


There was one - the swimming after the full bodysuits came in. According to wiki: 'As of 24 August 2009, 93 world records had been broken by swimmers wearing a LZR Racer, and 33 of the first 36 Olympic medals have been won wearing it.'

2014-10-16T06:16:38+00:00

Quitwhinging

Guest


From all reports Siddle seemed to be more threatening against Pakistan A yesterday than he was at the beginning of they year. he apparently managed to generate Good carry which is a positive sign

2014-10-16T03:33:11+00:00

Peter

Guest


Remember Michael 'The Whit' Whitney getting picked from English county cricket to play in an Ashes series?

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:39:07+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hilfy bowled well in the tour game yesterday by all accounts but may have to wait for his comeback with it becoming increasingly likely Australia will play both Lyon and O'Keefe.

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:31:45+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Depends on which Siddle you're talking about Timmuh - the old 140kmh+ one or the recent medium pacer.

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:31:03+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


If Siddle can get back bowling 140kmh then he is a very good bowler. He is accurate, has more variation than people give him credit for and is as durable and courageous as any bowler I've seen.

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:29:44+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Pattinson has all but ruled himself out of playing international cricket this summer as he looks to remodel his action so he is no certainty for the Ashes tour.

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:28:21+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Perhaps not Lachlan, although visiting players can practise for months with the Dukes ball beforehand to acclimatise if they want.

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:25:33+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


If Johnson bowls even 90% as well as he did in the Ashes or SA he will vaporise the Indian batting lineup.

AUTHOR

2014-10-16T01:16:00+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


There is a lot of excitement about guys like Behrendorff and Hazlewood but they'd need to produce the goods again this Shield season to leapfrog an in-form Bird.

2014-10-15T23:36:44+00:00

Julian King

Roar Guru


Hazelwood has moved above Bird in the pecking order of Aussie quicks. The selectors like him.

2014-10-15T20:12:24+00:00

Jack Smith

Roar Guru


Is Mitchell Johnson just going to destroy the Indian lineup? Like Ronan says, pace shy

2014-10-15T19:12:58+00:00

Peter

Guest


Good to see you found the caps key.

2014-10-15T14:56:05+00:00

bryan

Guest


I think Bird's selection is more based upon Siddle's form and if Watto returns to the team. It was very very clear that as soon as stuff was getting out of hand, siddle, watto and lyon came on, just to dry up runs. Bird is in that category, and will be picked if the others cannot.

2014-10-15T14:48:55+00:00

bryan

Guest


Football. Remember the balls at the South Africa World cup?

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