Australia's fast bowling future looks bright

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

Josh Hazlewood, James Pattinson and Pat Cummins have a lot in common.

They are all quick with the ability to bowl consistently above 140km/h. They are all young – Hazlewood is 23 years old, Pattinson 24, and Cummins 21.

They have all had their unwanted share of injuries.

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They also each claimed a five-wicket haul in their first Test match.

Hazlewood was the latest of the trio to bag a five-for on debut, with an impressive first innings return at the Gabba. He bowled with control and showed the ability to swing the ball both ways at pace.

He may have carried nerves into his first two days at the bowling crease in Test cricket but it did not show. In the modern cricket vernacular, he consistently hit the right areas and as such reaped a healthy reward.

He was on the cusp of a Test debut a few years back before injury put a halt to things.

Cummins burst onto the scene at Johannesburg in November 2011.

The previous Test at Cape Town saw Australia totally humiliated, having been bowled out for a staggering 41 in their second innings to be beaten by eight wickets. Largely due to Cummins’ efforts on debut at Wanderers the Australians levelled the two-match series.

He followed his first innings 1-38 with a searing 6-79 as he spearheaded the Aussies to a two-wicket win, winning the man-of-the-match award in the process.

Shortly after that performance he suffered the first of many stress fractures in his back.

His run with injury has been so great that he has hardly bowled a ball in a first-class match since his Test debut three years ago. His last first-class outing was for Australia A against South Africa A in Rustenburg 13 months ago.

He is being eased back into the fold at present and has tasted the international arena again with some T20 and ODI appearances against South Africa last month. He will soon be back in first-class ranks with New South Wales.

Whether he can return to the 150km/h pace of his late teens remains questionable, but he will still bowl at a fair click and he has the ability to bowl outswing with good control.

Like Cummins, Pattinson also claimed the man-of-the-match award in his maiden appearance with 1-64 and 5-27 against New Zealand at the Gabba in December 2011. His outswingers delivered at pace proved a handful for the Kiwi batsmen.

Remarkably he was man-of-the-match next start against the Black Caps at Bellerive Oval, claiming 5-51 and 3-54.

He made it three awards from his first three Tests when he snared 2-55 and 4-53 against India at the MCG during the 2011 Boxing Day Test.

It was an incredible start to his career with his first three matches producing an astonishing 20 wickets at 15.2. It was the stuff that young boys could seemingly only dream of.

Alas the momentum was stunted by persistent injury, yet he has still managed to claim 51 wickets at 27.1 from 13 Tests between lay-offs.

Like Cummins he is currently being nursed back into full bowling.

As Ryan Harris (35) and Mitchell Johnson (33) are heading towards retirement, the trio of Hazlewood, Pattinson and Cummins will be looked at to cover their void and assume the mantle as the team’s strike bowlers.

Each has the goods and pedigree to ably assume the mantle, but keeping them all fit has proven to be the biggest concern. If that can be achieved Australia will continue to boast one of the most potent pace attacks in the world.

Aside from the above triumvirate there are other quicks in Australia with considerable credentials.

James Faulkner’s 45-match first-class career has produced 147 wickets at 24.1 with many garnered on the traditionally batting-friendly Bellerive Oval pitch.

In his one taste of Test cricket – the fifth match of the 2013 Ashes series at The Oval – he produced figures of 4-51 and 2-47 with his victims including Ian Bell, Alastair Cook and Ian Trott.

While seen primarily at present as a limited-overs specialist at international level, at 24 his first-class record shows he could still offer a lot in the Test arena and being a left-armer he can offer a good counter-balance.

Jackson Bird is another who has had injury as a regular companion.

In his first Sheffield Shield match this season for Tasmania against South Australia at Hobart he captured 6-50 in the first innings. Older than the others who have been mentioned, the 28-year-old boasts 118 wickets at 20.9 at first-class level, with his three Tests producing 13 wickets at 23.3.

Like Hazlewood, he is blessed with height and claims many of his wickets with lateral movement off the pitch.

Sean Abbott continues to improve, with his recent 6-14 in an innings against Queensland testament to his rapid development.

At 22 he has already represented his country at T20 and ODI level.

Mitchell Starc is currently playing his 14th Test, however like his previous four he seems destined to be omitted immediately with Harris expected to be fit for Boxing Day.

Remarkably he has been recalled to the Test team seven times and has never been able to nail down a spot. At 24 he still has time on his side, although he runs the risk of being overtaken in the pecking order in the near future.

All of these bowlers have the ingredient that coach Darren Lehmann is wanting – pace.

One man who continues to throw up good numbers is South Australia’s Chadd Sayers. The 27-year-old has had a couple of fine seasons with the Redbacks.

He kicked off the current Shield season with a nine-wicket haul against the Bulls at Adelaide.

He may lack the out-and-out pace which Lehmann is so enamoured by but his figures at first-class level make compelling reading – 129 wickets at 24.7 from 34 matches with 7 five-wicket hauls.

Australia has a tradition of producing outstanding strike bowlers and going on those currently in the wings we will continue to in the future.

That is, of course, if we can keep them on the paddock.

The Crowd Says:

2014-12-20T15:31:50+00:00

Stan McCan

Guest


I reckon Australia would have spent more on sports science han any other cricket nation bar maybe England. And yet the Aussies seem to get more injuries than any other nation. It's like our local footy. Collingwood seem to spend more on sports science than any other club and have more injuries than most others. Don't make sense

2014-12-20T12:28:32+00:00

Matth

Guest


And is playing 6 for Tassie and doing quite well

2014-12-20T12:24:41+00:00

Matth

Guest


Yeah I think people forget how good he was when fit.

2014-12-19T21:35:18+00:00

Simoc

Guest


It seems the top batsman are more worried about bounce than speed. And Hazelwood does look good. So did Pattinson when he first came into the side, but was as flat as a pancake on his comeback. The speed requirement is a Lehmann thing. It's nice to have one super quick bowler but the rest need to have accuracy, possibly with the exception of Starc. A tall left arm test quality quick is a bonus. I'de prefer Faulkner to Siddle now, as the workhorse. The superquick (Johnson) tries to blast the batsman out, the rest work him out using the McDermott formula (bowl full length).

2014-12-19T13:30:32+00:00

deccas

Guest


I watched the Vic vs NSW game at the mcg this season and Sandhu outbowled Hazlewood with ease, had a catch dropped and two or 3 edges through slips for 4 that made his figures more untidy looking than his bowling merited. He did struggle adjusted his line to the right hand left hand bowling combination, but I think he should really be in the mix in the next couple of years. He has a durable strong action and can bowl long spells, I think he is the right replacement for the siddle role in time to come

2014-12-19T10:36:44+00:00

Gav

Guest


Because NCN is a state bowler and that's as far as he'll progress. His average. Behrendorff and Paris could be a different story.

2014-12-19T09:04:44+00:00

art pagonis

Guest


There are several not so obvious people to talk about. Young Tremaine from Victoria can be violently good. Fekete from Tasmania is very consistently quick and takes bunches of wickets. Sam Rainbird is lefthanded and quick. Behrendorff and Coulter-Nile have to be considered.Think of a fast bowler and the first word is "INJURY". So Australia needs at least 10 in the bank who are prepared to be as fit as Mitch Johnson...or they can forget about it. And if they don't manage their own workload...they will be where Mitch Marsh, Coulter-Nile, Pattinson, Cummins, Starc, Bird and almost every quick have been lately....on the physio couch. James Faulkner is tough enough to compete with Marsh for the no. 6 alrounders spot. He has taken on a batting coach to prove it.

2014-12-19T05:40:49+00:00

Craig Watson

Guest


Good read Glenn. I saw both Pattinson and Hazlewood in a day- niter between the Blues and Bushrangers a couple of years ago(before back troubles) and dead set they were both unplayable on a lively deck. I remember saying to my brother that these two will open the bowling for Australia one day. There was one over in particular that must have pleased national selectors.. Hoff had Vic great Brad Hodge playing and missing at every ball. How he did not nick at least one of them only the cricketing gods would know.

2014-12-19T05:14:36+00:00

Quitwhinging

Guest


I don't see Sayers being picked unfortunately, when there was a replacement bowler needed in the UAE they called for Hilfenhaus instead of a much more deserving Sayers.

2014-12-19T05:13:04+00:00

CoverPoint

Guest


Cutting has an excellent first class record with the ball and is a very handy bat. Also, the last time Hilfenhaus and Bollinger bowled together it was the least effective bowling attack I have ever seen in this country and Australia got an absolute grubbing. NCN is another bowler who is not really of test standard.

2014-12-19T02:10:34+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


I think he's a much more valuable red ball bowler than white ball.

2014-12-19T01:24:24+00:00

jammel

Guest


Yep Red Kev - Cutting is certainly lacking consistency. Your numbers show that well. I couldn't agree more.

2014-12-19T01:11:08+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Batted beautifully...then stupidly. Wasn't he kicking himself when he got out after that let off? I hope that translates into even better concentration and success next innings. At least the sceptics who complain about consistency will be silenced. Can't get more consistent than getting out on your average!

2014-12-19T00:54:28+00:00

jammel

Guest


Pattinson's 24yo. He'll be back - if fit, Pattinson can be a genuine leader of the attack. World class.

2014-12-19T00:51:47+00:00

dan ced

Guest


He is in my BBL fantasy team :P can be expensive, but it's his pace variation that has caught my eye.

2014-12-19T00:51:15+00:00

dan ced

Guest


I was very impressed with what I saw of Paris, back in 2 weeks supposedly (he was in the commentary box in the legends game the other day). Actually WA's matador bowling troupe in general were impressive. Probably the best overall pool of bowlers to pick from. I still think Sayers fills a handy niche though that could benefit AUS, whereas the WA contingent would be waiting on injuries to incumbent Aussie bowlers (Harris, Starc, Johnson).

2014-12-19T00:42:10+00:00

jammel

Guest


Don - what did you think of your boy Shaun yesterday? He did look classy, shame he couldn't kick on.

2014-12-19T00:40:33+00:00

jammel

Guest


Don - we've had the discussion before on NCN (yes, I have been watching him bowl including earlier this season). Agree on Behrendorff, Paris and Fekete too.

2014-12-19T00:27:33+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


I wouldn't write him off either but I wouldn't call him a prospect any more until he does something prospective...such as playing a season of Shield cricket with success and resilience.

2014-12-19T00:25:17+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


I'd have NCN with Harris...in tier 2. NCN is just a gun; fast aggressive, has excellent control. great short ball great yorker, moves both ways, reverses and is angry. Harris has not much left. Bowled ok in Adelaide but his body won't let him do any more. Rest eases the pain but you can't grow new cartilege by missing one test. He is all heart and skill...but he needs legs too.

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