Khawaja back in frame for ODIs and Tests

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Usman Khawaja ventured to England this winter to hone his game and recapture the attention of the national selectors who seemed to have moved on from the Queenslander.

The 27-year-old must have felt deflated after labouring during his stint with Lancashire in division one of the County Championship. A sole hundred was the only high point amid a return of 413 runs at 32 across seven first-class matches.

This Australian summer now shapes as a pivotal juncture in Khawaja’s cricketing journey. Four years ago, he looked set to have a prosperous international career.

Possessed of a tight defensive technique and a generous assortment of strokes, Khawaja made a promising debut against England just weeks after his 24th birthday.

While he only made 37 and 21, Australia’s Ashes campaign had been so calamitous that his performances in the fifth Test at Sydney was viewed as a bright spot.

Batting at first drop he spent a combined three-and-a-half hours at the crease in that match. Showcasing sage shot selection and admirable patience, he defied an England attack that had vaporised Australia all summer.

Khawaja appeared unflustered, unhurried and undaunted by Test cricket. He looked like a natural successor at number three to legendary batsman Ricky Ponting. But now, after having been dropped three times in his nine-Test career, the 27-year-old has fallen off the radar of the national selectors.

During his last stint in the Test side, in last year’s Ashes in England, the left-handed strokemaker looked unrecognisable at the crease. Patently batting with nerves and self-doubt, Khawaja’s play was stilted and uncertain. His struggles against former England off spinner Graeme Swann were particularly stark.

He was promptly dumped from the Test line-up. But Khawaja rebounded strongly in the Sheffield Shield last summer, returning 551 runs at 50, including an imperious 182* in a record run chase against South Australia late in the season.

Despite his off-season form trough in England, his batting has looked pristine in the current Matador BBQs One Day Cup.

An aesthetically-pleasing cricketer, Khawaja appeared in command during every one of his first five innings in the competition. But he frittered away a string of good starts, registering just one fifty.

Finally on Saturday, he produced the epic dig he had promised to play, gracefully bullying Tasmania’s attack en route to 166 from 110 balls as his side incredibly chased down 398 to win.

Khawaja is the leading runscorer in the competition, with 403 runs at 66, following on from his similarly impressive return of 426 runs at 71 in the domestic one dayers last season.

He said recently that he viewed ODIs as perhaps his most likely avenue back into international cricket. His fluent strokeplay will have ensured that he is a strong chance of forcing his way into Australia’s World Cup squad.

If he can translate that potent form into Sheffield Shield runs, Khawaja could find himself back in the frame for Test cricket, the format for which he looks so well suited.

With only two settled members of Australia’s favoured Test top six aged less than 33 years old, opportunities will soon arise for emerging players.

Mitch Marsh and Glenn Maxwell are fighting it out to take Shane Watson’s spot as Test all-rounder. Phil Hughes is odds on to replace veteran opener Chris Rogers when he retires.

Alex Doolan is trying to make a fist of batting number three. And the likes of Tasmanian Jordan Silk, Queenslanders Chris Lynn and Joe Burns, Sydneysiders Ryan Carters and Nic Maddinson and South Australian Travis Head are emerging as potential Test players.

Khawaja can still have a substantial international career. But with some of those younger players rising rapidly he must be at the top of his game when the next chance comes to pass.

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-27T05:05:01+00:00

dan ced

Guest


Old news, everybody is talking about Michael Klinger now. WA's saviour until the national team finally pick him up in the near future :D

2014-10-25T09:16:08+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


You can't use one day cricket to argue about a strike rate in test cricket - that's weird. Plus he was chasing a massive total, what would you expect him to do?

2014-10-23T08:54:17+00:00

HoneyBadgerCricket

Guest


As a neutral Kiwi i am a little worried. You must have a hell of a team if Khawaja cant get in it.

2014-10-22T21:10:53+00:00

Khawarmy Khawarmy

Roar Pro


Mr Ryan, Please accept the Khawarmy's humble apologies. We would also like to congrat you and the @Sokettes on ROK Test Debut!

2014-10-22T12:00:57+00:00

John

Roar Rookie


Good to see Ussie post another 100. Taking his tally to over 500.

2014-10-22T08:05:36+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Well our big weakness, our middle order let us down big time in this game. Need to be better in the finals

2014-10-22T05:41:11+00:00

Khan

Roar Rookie


Just saw some highlights of it Ronan, he is looking in amazing form, now the only batsman with over 500 runs in the tournament

2014-10-22T04:13:18+00:00

Tom from Perth

Roar Rookie


Yep. They're cruising now. Hopefully Klinger can dig in with Simmons and get the runs themselves. Another bonus point would be nice.

2014-10-22T03:53:04+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Harris and Simmons should go for a bonus point, Tom.

2014-10-22T03:52:02+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You really don't read comments, do you Joel? You just look for something to argue with. I mention Harris to suggest that the players who will step up in a few years time are not necessarily those whose names are up there now. Silk, Maddinson, Lynn, Head have done nothing to be in selection discussion..neither has Harris...but blokes are mentioning them. Some of you are mentioning a kid who hasn't even played FC cricket. Why not mention Jaron Morgan?

2014-10-22T02:37:44+00:00

Tom from Perth

Roar Rookie


266 haha. Nice bowling by Rimmington. You can tell that Langer isn't taking this game 100% seriously by resting the two form bowlers of the competition. Still knocked over the second best team for 266, not bad at all. Hopefully our suspect batting line up does all right.

2014-10-22T02:20:10+00:00

Joel

Roar Rookie


Far out Don, we get it.. you're a WA fan. There are some real candidates in that Warriors team but the majority are just barely average. Thank god you're not a selector. Harris looks ok, but he's just ok.

AUTHOR

2014-10-22T02:16:10+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


QLD were looking good for even 350+ but WA have reeled them in brilliantly and now have a chance of limiting them to 275, which would be a great effort.

2014-10-22T02:15:16+00:00

Joel

Roar Rookie


If he's fit and in form, Rogers will play in the Ashes.. Not only because he deserves it for his recent accomplishments, but because he's scored a massive amount of first class runs on english pitches.

2014-10-22T01:52:41+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


We are looking good for 320+

AUTHOR

2014-10-22T01:36:59+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Khawaja has just hit another ton (107no against WA). He has now made 935 runs at 78 over the past two domestic one-day competitions. Really pushing for a World Cup berth.

2014-10-21T23:42:12+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


WA's fielding won't allow a bonus point against.

2014-10-21T23:38:38+00:00

Dylan

Guest


They could definately win because of our dodgy batting line up but our bowling line up is the best in the competition. Assuming we make a decent score, basically anything over 200, you wont be able to get the double bonus point

2014-10-21T21:51:48+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


You go to bed and all the WA boys start the sledging. The Bulls have a better batting line up than WA and enough bowling depth to win this game.

2014-10-21T20:57:43+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Ah it's cricket season again! An old Khawaja article never cease to disappoint in bringing out the Army! Glad to see the Khawarmy have returned from exile! Time will tell whether this summer is any different to the recent one's for us Khawaja fans!

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar