Sheek's best Australian cricket XI

By sheek / Roar Guru

Having offered Roarers my Socceroos first and second XIs I now turn my attention to cricket. Here I will present not only my baggy greens (Test) first and second XIs but my gold caps (ODI) first and second XIs.

The Australian One Day cricket team doesn’t have an official nickname, but gold caps is my suggestion. Bearing in mind also that baggy greens is the unofficial moniker for the Test team.

In making these selections in various sports, I have been presented with several dilemmas where I have entered the sport just as a legend of the game was bowing out.

Kangaroos legend Reg Gasnier is one example and Wallabies legend Ken Catchpole another. Both Gasnier and Catchpole were forced out of their respective codes while in their prime at the age of 28, from injury.

I cannot help but feel under normal circumstances I could have enjoyed watching and following both players for another two or four years.

Bob Simpson provided me with a similar dilemma. He was captain and opener of the first two Tests I ever saw (on TV), against India in 1967-68. Simpson did everything asked of him, winning both Tests, and peeling off scores of 55, 103 and 109.

He then informed the selectors, of which Don Bradman was chairman, that he was retiring from Test cricket. Instead, he would tour England for the 1968 Ashes tour as a journalist rather than player, earning roughly 10 times as much money. After all, he had a young family to feed.

Simpson was sacked without hesitation and his fellow opener Bill Lawry named as replacement skipper. Following a public outcry Simpson was recalled for the final Test in which he batted at number seven and captured eight wickets with his dangerous leg breaks.

Fortunately, I got another look at Simpson a decade later during the WSC crisis of 1977-79, when he returned to captain the official Australian team in a further 10 Tests.

For now, the best Test cricket team of the past 50 years is fairly straight forward. However, that luxury of selection could change in 12 months’ time if Michael Clarke, Steve Smith and David Warner all maintain their current dynamic form.

My Test cricket first XI (1967-present)
Bob Simpson, Matt Hayden, Ricky Ponting, Greg Chappell, Allan Border (vc), Steve Waugh (c), Adam Gilchrist (wk), Mitchell Johnson, Shane Warne, Dennis Lillee, Glenn McGrath.

Coach: Darren Lehmann (Simpson would be coach if he wasn’t in the team).

I’m sure most Roarers would agree this is a fabulous team. It bats deep to number nine and has plenty of variety and depth in the bowling, with four frontline bowlers and four support bowlers.

It is also an outstanding fielding side led by Simpson, who is arguably the best slips fielder in history.

My Test cricket second XI (1967-present)
Bill Lawry, Justin Langer, Ian Chappell (c), Michael Clarke (vc), Michael Hussey, Doug Walters, Ian Healy (wk), Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie, Jeff Thomson, Stuart MacGill.

Coach: Geoff Marsh.

Obviously, the second XI selection will create far more debate. I am holding my opinion on Warner and Smith. If they continue their marvellous form over the next 12 months they will be contenders for either the first or second XI.

But it’s wait and see. There are two many examples from cricket history of players reaching a peak before plateauing.

The selection of both Chappell and Thomson might raise eyebrows with a younger generation. Chappelli averaged 50 at number three, the most technically demanding and therefore most specialist of all the batting positions.

Thomson was without doubt the fastest bowler I have seen over 50 years. Faster than Lee, faster than Shaun Tait, faster than Shoaib Akhtar, faster than Waqar Younis, faster than Dale Steyn or Allan Donald. He was faster than any of the Windies brigade. At his best, he was a fearsome sight and often unplayable.

Now for the ODI team. Prior to the 2007 World Cup, ESPN selected the following all-time Australian ODI team:

Mark Waugh, Adam Gilchrist (wk), Ricky Ponting (vc), Dean Jones, Steve Waugh (c), Michael Bevan, Andrew Symonds, Brett Lee, Shane Warne, Dennis Lillee, Glenn McGrath, Greg Chappell (12th man).

In the intervening eight years, what changes, what improvements can we make to this team, if any?

I believe three changes are required. Michael Clarke, Michael Hussey and Shane Watson must come into the best XI. The men to go (along with Chappell) are Steve Waugh, Jones and Bevan.

I know some people will be shocked, especially at the demotion of Bevan. That’s a mighty quartet of players to demote. But the answer is simple – surfeit of riches.

Australia can afford to relegate Bevan et al to the second XI. The bar of excellence has been raised higher.

My ODI first XI (1967-present)
Mark Waugh, Adam Gilchrist (wk), Ricky Ponting (c), Michael Clarke (vc), Michael Hussey, Shane Watson, Andrew Symonds, Brett Lee, Shane Warne, Dennis Lillee, Glenn McGrath.

Although Hayden has a better batting average and strike rate to Mark Waugh, the latter has an invaluable all-round game that gives him the edge.

This is a tremendous team, combining powerful batting to number nine, six frontline bowlers, plus two backups, and a magnificent all-round fielding side.

My ODI second XI (1967-present)
Matt Hayden, Brad Haddin (wk), Dean Jones, Greg Chappell (vc), Steve Waugh (c), Michael Bevan, Simon O’Donnell, Mitchell Johnson, Brad Hogg, Nathan Bracken, Craig McDermott.

Of course, the upcoming 2015 edition of the World Cup could see some changes to these selections in a further 12 months’ time. Will the likes of Smith, James Faulkner, George Bailey, Glenn Maxwell and Aaron Finch become heroes in 2015?

Wouldn’t you love to see these two teams (Australian ODI first and second XIs) take each other on? It would be something to see!

The Crowd Says:

2015-02-15T08:15:04+00:00

Armchair Expert

Guest


Not sure how you can condemn Bevan for his not outs when more often than not, the difference between Australia winning or losing depended on whether he was dismissed or not.

2015-02-12T05:49:42+00:00

Prosenjit majumdar

Guest


What about sylvester clark?i remember his pot bellied self in world masters' cricket 1995, still giving his all and bowling bouncers at decent pace.if one can do that with such body, must had produced serious heat at his prime.

2015-02-11T23:12:23+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Prosenjit majumdar If I may throw my two bobs worth in I'd say" Whispering Death " Michael Holding very quick ,consistent and very accurate and not just in short spells, then Curtly Ambrose ....

2015-02-11T16:04:28+00:00

Prosenjit majumdar

Guest


@sheek, who would you say is the fastest windies bowler you've ever seen? Not talking about one or two spells but on a consistent basis.

2015-02-11T06:24:22+00:00

DubbleBubble

Guest


It was 18 not 28 but yeah he got carted.

2015-02-11T03:25:09+00:00

Mango Jack

Guest


Sheek, I like your choice of S Waugh for 1st XI captain. Of all the fine leaders we've had over the period between Border and Clarke/Smith, I've always thought that he changed the way AUS played test cricket more than any other. Border was perfect for the times - gritty, cranky, he dragged the sorry mess that was AUS cricket back to a position of strength, but he was not a great tactician. Taylor was the consumate Board choice, in a nice way - solid and very media savvy. Ponting was aggressive and street smart. Clarke leads from the front but was/is too prone to aloofness. Waugh threw away Taylor's sometimes extreme caution and introduced the mindset of playing to win, not to avoid a loss. It transformed how test cricket was played, with far less draws these days, and probably helped save the game.

2015-02-11T03:10:14+00:00

Mango Jack

Guest


Yep, Bevan got us over the line so many times. His cool, measured batting was priceless in tight games.

AUTHOR

2015-02-10T23:33:41+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Scottyridge, You make some decent observations. Keep that up & you might convince me to change back again! Yes, the game has changed - 90% sweet spots on bats & reduced, roped off boundaries. Plus, a desire by authorities to have batting dominant pitches. Alternately, one day stats tend to carry more weight than first class averages, when comparing different players. And T20 stats, being a much shorter game again, will carry even more weight when comparing different players.

2015-02-10T22:58:20+00:00

scottyridge

Guest


No Bevan or Dean Jones in the 1 day team??? Seriously!!! How many games did those guys win Australia in the 80's and 90's. You can't compare strike rates as it was a different game back then. But you can compare man of the matches. Then you would of picked both of them. And Watson and Symonds over Steve Waugh. Waugh was a great 1 day bowler before his injuries.

2015-02-10T12:18:16+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Great read Sheek and brilliant teams. Cheers

AUTHOR

2015-02-10T10:43:34+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Thanks Bondy, But surely you can't be serious about Langer & M.Waugh being in the test 1st XI? Ponting - 168 tests, 51.85 ave, 41 cent, 58.72 s/r. Hayden - 103 tests, 50.74 ave, 30 cent, 60.11 s/r. Langer - 105 tests, 45.27 ave, 23 cent, 54.23 s/r. M.Waugh - 128 tests, 41.82, 20 cent, 52.27 s/r. I'm a huge fan of Mark Waugh's, but his test average is very low for consideration. Sadly, Waugh underperformed compared to his potential. I actually think the opposite, Mark Waugh was a much better ODI player than a test player.

2015-02-10T10:27:15+00:00

Bondy

Guest


I think J Langer would fell a bit stiff not featuring in the first Test 11 perhaps taking Hayden's place or Ponting's . Overall too I feel Mark Waugh was an outstanding Test Match Cricketer far better in my opinion than a ODI player .. Nice series Sheek ...

2015-02-10T07:31:44+00:00

Johnno

Guest


1 change, Alan Border (c) in for a very unlucky Darren Lehmann as 12th man.

2015-02-10T07:26:02+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Aus 3rd XI ODI (guys who sheek missed out on she's sides, so i'm making up a team) Geoff Marsh Mark Waugh David Boon (man of the match in the 87 world cup final, and in the 87 semi in Lahore vs Pakistan got a crucial 65 opening the batting which set up the innings so some big knocks there) Damien Martyn (Marto won 2 world cups) Darren Lehmann(Lehmann won 2 world cups) Tom Moody (won 2 world cups 87 +99) Ian Healy WK Peter Taylor Shaun Tait Damien Fleming Bruce Reid who was part of the 87 world cup winning squad A good side if you ask me, very handy.

AUTHOR

2015-02-10T07:07:59+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Sure, If keeping was only criteria for selecting our keepers, we would probably turn them upside down. Historically, it might be something like this: 1. Blackham. 2. Grout. 3. Oldfield. 4. Tallon. Etc, etc. Today, keepers are almost expected to be specialist batsman. I guess the truth lies somewhere in between.....

2015-02-10T06:57:02+00:00

Jacob York

Roar Rookie


Shane Watson does not deserve a spot in your ODI XI. Two years of good cricket are not enough to make him a star.

2015-02-10T06:33:45+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


I don't know about that, you may be exaggerating that in your mind a little. Johnson has had 3 particularly ordinary Test series and that's about it.

2015-02-10T06:11:21+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Reiffel's overhead catching technique on the boundary wasn't great.

2015-02-10T06:06:32+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Your lack of self awareness is priceless.

2015-02-10T05:47:29+00:00

Brian

Guest


My XI is not as bowler heavy remembering batsman are key to ODI M Waugh Gilchrist Ponting Jones S Waugh Bevan Symonds/Watson Johnson Warne Lee McGrath Five bowlers plus both Waugh twins can bowl. Happy to put Hussey instead of S Waugh but in the final of the all time XI against WI with Ambrose and Marshall sharing the new ball (or 2) I want a pure batsman at number 6.

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