Faulkner on the verge of becoming Australia's ODI MVP

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Steve Smith? Mitchell Johnson? Mitchell Starc? James Faulkner? Who is now Australia’s most valuable ODI player?

There has not been a clearcut holder of this title since all-rounder Shane Watson relinquished it two years ago after dominating ODI cricket for several years.

Over a three-and-a-half year period from October 2009 to Feb 2013, Watson smashed just under 3000 runs at an average of 48 and took exactly one wicket per match at the miserly average of 28. During this golden era of his career he was arguably the best limited overs cricketer on the planet.

A spate of injuries have restricted him to just 24 matches since then, with his batting average dropping to 31 over that time and his medium pacers claiming just nine wickets at 72. Watson remains a match winner on his day but is no longer Australia’s lynchpin. His decline has coincided with the rise of a similarly explosive all-rounder in Faulkner.

After just 37 matches, the 24-year-old Tasmanian already has strong claims to being the best all-rounder in ODI cricket. On the ICC’s ODI all-rounder rankings he is now two spots ahead of Watson. Faulkner’s ranking of seventh does not to justice to his value though.

I would argue he is as effective as the next five players ranked ahead of him – Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi and Mohammed Hafeez, Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan, India’s Ravi Jadeja, and Sri Lanka’s Tillakaratne Dilshan.

The all-rounder ranked number one, Sri Lankan supremo Angelo Mathews, is a wonderful player and a shade more valuable than Faulkner at this stage. Mathews is less of an all-rounder than Faulkner, however, and is used more sparingly with the ball now than he was earlier in his career, taking just 19 wickets from his past 36 matches.

Faulkner’s batting has garnered him the most praise, with his ability to close out run chases for Australia starting to resemble the phenomenal efforts of predecessors Michael Bevan and Mike Hussey.

His batting statistics are astonishing – 720 runs at 45, with the incredible strike rate of 108. Faulkner, of course, is in the side as a bowling all-rounder and his canny efforts with the ball should not be overlooked.

Frequently entrusted with bowling at the death, the left-armer’s clever changes of pace have helped him snare 49 wickets at the respectable average of 33. There is no other bowling all-rounder in Australia who can replicate what Faulkner does. If he were injured and Australia sought a like-for-like replacement perhaps the closest they could get would be Ben Cutting.

While the Queenslander is as talented a 50-over bowler as Faulkner, he is a far more limited batsman. Cutting possesses the same destructive striking but has a questionable defence and minimal finesse. As a batsman, he is an effective slogger but nothing more.

Faulkner’s Australian teammates Johnson and Starc also are gifted lower order batsman. Both are capable of playing decisive innings in coloured clothing. They cannot, however, do so with anything close to the frequency or confidence of Faulkner.

The Tasmanian is leagues behind that pair as a bowler but is now the most important player in regards to Australia’s team balance. His flourishing batting will allow Australia freedom with their line-up in the World Cup.

If neither Glenn Maxwell nor Mitchell Marsh proved the right fit at number six, Faulkner potentially could plug that hole. Such an attacking move would effectively allow Australia to play five frontline bowlers, making room for Johnson and Starc to be paired with spinner Xavier Doherty and one of Josh Hazlewood or Pat Cummins.

But his value at eight goes beyond the runs he scores. The knowledge that they have such a formidable player coming in at the fall of the sixth wicket eases the pressure on Australia’s top seven and allows them to bat aggressively and instinctively.

With Australia hosting the World Cup, home conditions will suit Faulkner perfectly. His career bowling average of 33 is swollen by the phenomenally high-scoring series against India on unbelievably flat pitches in late 2013.

Across 23 matches on more favourable and familiar decks in Australia and England he has grabbed 35 wickets at 29. He has also prospered with the bat in those matches, with just under 400 runs at 37.

This World Cup shapes as Faulkner’s passage not just to Australia’s ODI MVP crown but also back into Test calculations. With an Ashes tour of the horizon, a string of startling World Cup performances could vault him into Australia’s squad for England.

The Crowd Says:

2015-01-30T16:09:51+00:00

Tom from Perth

Guest


Mate been flat out doing an internship and hanging with my girlfriend. Happy days but it's been distracting me from my cricket! Been doing real well though man. Caught the last of the BBL - carn you scorchers!

2015-01-30T13:47:46+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


I read an article where they gave that self-same quote after they talked about him being on the outer in 2011-12 and 2012-13 (with Andrew Wu in the SMH), so it sounds like someone is doing some editorialising.

2015-01-30T13:02:37+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Tom you legend where have you been? We've missed you

2015-01-30T12:48:53+00:00

Tom from Perth

Guest


Read this twice now and laughed out loud both times. Gold mate.

2015-01-30T12:11:10+00:00

Nudge

Guest


This is what yesterday's paper said after he won the AB medal. It wasn't all records and accolades for Smith, who was dropped from the Australian one day team at the beginning of the South African series just over 2 months ago. "When you get dropped it's always sad times, it's not a good thing but you just have to look at yourself and say that you need some improvement" Smith said.

2015-01-29T23:51:27+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


Are you sure the quote was about that particular one day series? He's been properly dropped before (i.e. gone back to NSW for a extended period).

2015-01-29T20:10:04+00:00

Nudge

Guest


As I said Dalgety Smith said he was dropped for that first one day international. If he said he was dropped that means he was dropped not rested.

2015-01-29T15:05:32+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Whiteman started for WA as a top 3 batsman. He is definitely good enough for 5 or 6...and will be by the time Hadds goes.

2015-01-29T14:05:36+00:00

13th Man

Roar Pro


Well Handscomb is a ten times better batsman than Wade so why don't the vics scrap Wade and give Handscomb the gloves full time. Wade is just rubbish. If Handscomb gets his keeping good he could be that no 6 batsman that allow Faulkner to bat 7 in tests.

2015-01-29T13:56:34+00:00

13th Man

Roar Pro


I want to see him and mitch marsh both in the same XI. Forget maxwell, these are the two guys that can win you the WC.

2015-01-29T13:39:10+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


I wouldn't get too caught up on the whole "dropped" thing Nudge. Not playing in a game or two doesn't mean the same thing it used to for ODI's, given the amount of games they play. Managing the squad needs to be done over a period of time not just from game to game, particularly when there are a number of quality and potentially quality players around.

2015-01-29T11:58:35+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Smith won player of the series in Pakistan and was dropped for that first game. Even an article in the paper today quoting Smith, saying that after being dropped he just had to get on with the job. I'm pretty sure I can remember yourself Ronan saying his form had been pretty ordinary for a while. The theory at the time from a lot of people on the roar was that he was spending too much time on his batting which had had a pretty ordinary affect on his bowling.

AUTHOR

2015-01-29T11:40:04+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Nudge, in November Faulkner was rested from the first two ODIs against SA so he could get some very rare red ball cricket (given he is constantly missing Shield games because of limited overs cricket for Australia). In Australia's last ODI series before that against Pakistan he had averaged 35 with the bat and 32 with the ball...hardly grounds for being dropped.

2015-01-29T11:38:33+00:00

Nudge

Guest


A great top 4, but you could name other Aussie players who could win this award for the World Cup. Smith, Faulkner, Starc and Johnson are a great top 4, but you couldn't rule out a Warner, a Watson a Finch or even Maxwell if he finds the consistent form that he found in the IPL last year, winning the best player of the tournament against the best 20/20 cricketers in the world.

2015-01-29T11:30:42+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


It's a big fault if you consider him one of the top 3 players in the game.

2015-01-29T11:23:46+00:00

Nudge

Guest


He was dropped about 5 one dayers ago though Ronan after an ordinary 12 months

AUTHOR

2015-01-29T10:45:29+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"in what way is Faulkner ‘hammering on the door’ of test selection?" 147 first class wickets at average of 24 and almost 1800 runs at 32. Faulkner would be in every other Test team in the world bar South Africa.

2015-01-29T10:18:51+00:00

Jameswm

Guest


There's no doubting a team is better balanced with a 5th bowler. The Aussies seem to want at 6 a good batsman close to the top 6 who can bowl useful overs. I said Faulkner could make the team as a 7 with a strong batting keeper at 6.

2015-01-29T09:59:19+00:00

tinfoil hat

Guest


So number six is now to be a bowling allrounder rather than one of the six best batsmen in the country? Seems ar$e backwards to me. i suppose it fits in with the strategy of preparing batsmen friendly roads for the tests this summer.

2015-01-29T09:53:28+00:00

tinfoil hat

Guest


in what way is Faulkner 'hammering on the door' of test selection?

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