Maxwell and Faulkner will push Test claims in county cricket

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

James Faulkner and Glenn Maxwell were notable omissions from Australia’s Ashes squad. The good news is that they will use some of that free time to hone their red-ball games in county cricket.

After completing their Indian Premier League duties, the Australian all-rounders will head to England to play in the English first-class competition, according to Fairfax Media.

Faulkner and Maxwell both have huge potential as Test cricketers but their development has been hampered by a lack of first-class cricket in recent times due to their international limited overs commitments.

Maxwell will play for Yorkshire in Division One of the County Championship and Faulkner for Lancashire in Division Two.

The Victorian, who will also play T20 cricket for Yorkshire, got the opportunity to play this first-class cricket because of an injury to Bushrangers teammate Aaron Finch.

Just over two weeks ago, Finch suffered a serious hamstring injury which will reportedly take at least 12 weeks to recover from. It could be well into July before he is ready to front up for Yorkshire.

With Maxwell’s IPL team Kings XI Punjab struggling, he should be free to leave for England in about a week. That means he should be able to play at least four first-class fixtures for Yorkshire but, depending on Finch’s recovery, could get as many as five or six matches under his belt.

Faulkner, meanwhile, will play for Lancashire and he, too, will be replacing an Australian teammate. He will take the place of Peter Siddle once the veteran paceman leaves England to join the Australian squad in the Caribbean later this month.

Siddle has been in great touch for Lancashire, taking 14 wickets at 23, and making 158 runs at 40 across their first four games. Faulkner will play with Lanchashire until the end of August, meaning he could play as many as eight first-class matches.

He and Maxwell should benefit greatly from their stints in English county cricket after having limited recent first-class cricket due to their responsibilities in coloured clothing for Australia.

Faulkner has played just five Sheffield Shield matches over the past two years and Maxwell eight, although only two of the spin-bowling all-rounders’ appearances were last summer.

Australian selector Rod Marsh has indicated that both players are still in their minds as far as Test cricket goes. They were overlooked for the upcoming Test tours of the Caribbean in favour of fellow all-rounders Shane Watson and Mitchell Marsh.

Watson was very fortunate to retain his place in the Test setup after an ordinary summer. He also faltered with the bat when it mattered in the last two Ashes – struggling when the series were alive before inflating his statistics with relatively meaningless scores once the series were all but decided.

Faulkner was particularly unlucky to miss out on the squads after impressing in his sole Test – the fifth match of the last Ashes in England. Faulkner has made it clear that returning to Australia’s Test setup is a burning desire for him.

He wrote in a recent column for The Mercury in Hobart that he had been told well in advance of the recent Test squad announcement that he wouldn’t be included because of his lack of recent red-ball cricket.

“So much of the focus and scheduling leading into the World Cup was focused on one-day cricket,” Faulkner wrote. “Now this is behind us, I can spend more time in whites playing for the Tigers. I would like to play Test cricket, that’s the pinnacle, and the path is pretty simple.

“I will have the opportunity to play more Sheffield Shield games for Tasmania next season – I’ve just got to make sure I do well with bat and ball and hopefully the rest can take care of itself.”

Maxwell’s first-class credentials are not yet as strong as Faulkner’s but he has the advantage of being a batting all-rounder rather than a bowling all-rounder.

With Watson in the fading twilight of his career, Maxwell looks set to spend years fighting the likes of Marsh and Moises Henriques for that Test all-rounder spot in the top six.

Exposure to the English county circuit should only benefit he and Faulkner and add to Australia’s depth at Test level.

The Crowd Says:

2015-05-15T09:08:52+00:00

Vish

Guest


Both of them are not needed to play test cricket. We need them fresh for the ODI and T 20 matches. Henriques would be better for tests. He looks more solid and his medium pacers would be more effectively used by Clarke. Khawaja needs to get inside tests. As opener or 3.

2015-05-15T03:31:31+00:00

Jacob Astill

Roar Rookie


I think you're definitely right on that. Faulkner is one of the most underrated first class cricketers in Australia I think, and if he can transfer some of that batting confidence he has in ODI games to his white clothes cricket it will definitely see him grow exponentially.

2015-05-14T07:25:33+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


Agree. I have a feeling that if Maxwell had been born in the pre-T20 era he'd be making mountains of Shield runs.

2015-05-14T07:12:26+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


I'd really like to see players like Maxwell and Faulkner skipping the IPL to play more county games in the next couple of years. I recall Mitchell Starc a couple of years ago skipping the IPL to focus on his Ashes preparation. I reckon Maxwell and Faulkner can probably afford to skip an IPL or two, being CA contract holders. Every first-class match is absolute gold for their long-form development as they come into the prime of their careers. I think both are very strategic talents for us, especially Maxwell, who in my opinion is one of our most important future middle-order batsmen.

2015-05-13T23:36:26+00:00

josh

Roar Rookie


Given his "unorthodox" playing style, the wide open expanses offered in first class cricket should suit Maxwell to a T.

2015-05-13T11:11:35+00:00

Jameswm

Guest


We stopped relying on 4 bowlers when Warne and McGrath retired.

2015-05-13T11:06:39+00:00

Jameswm

Guest


If he's batting at 7 with the keeper at 6, then he's your 4th seamer.

2015-05-13T09:14:52+00:00

Gav

Guest


The horse needs to be lead to water, drinking is his responsibility

2015-05-13T07:30:13+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


Yes, champagne cricket on a beer budget was the order. Some of the batting in that series was embarrassing.

AUTHOR

2015-05-13T06:39:36+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"It should be up to the man himself to develop his own game." Which is exactly what Maxwell's doing by wedging this county cricket stint into his already crammed cricketing schedule. I wish there were more developing Australian players spending the winter honing their games over there.

AUTHOR

2015-05-13T06:37:33+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Exactly, Maxwell only got to play two Shield games last year which gives him no time to develop - that is the problem for both he and Faulkner. That why I think it's very significant that both guys look set to get fairly lengthy spells of red ball cricket in the coming months, in a foreign environment too which is another big plus.

2015-05-13T06:37:22+00:00

Harvey Wilson

Roar Rookie


Totally agree. It should be up to the man himself to develop his own game. CA spent too much money on one other notable "all-rounder".

2015-05-13T05:21:34+00:00

Quitwhinging

Guest


It's kind of hard for Maxwell to play shield cricket when he spends a large chunk of the summer with the ODI side isn't it?

2015-05-13T04:40:42+00:00

BarryO

Guest


I tend to agree with CW. That innings perpetuated the perception that regardless of the state of the game, all Maxwell can do is bat super aggressively. Presumably to get to test level he's got to show that he can play a 'normal' test innings, or dare I say it a defensive one.

AUTHOR

2015-05-13T04:34:49+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"We needed a three to come in and consolidate." If that had been the tactic Australia was pursuing then clearly Maxwell would not have been the man chosen to play that role.

2015-05-13T04:34:16+00:00

Quitwhinging

Guest


If you expected Australia to draw that match then you clearly hadn't been watching the way they had been batting. And to place the blame solely on Maxwell is just petty

2015-05-13T03:13:06+00:00

CW

Guest


"brain explosion" is very apt. We were hardly in a position to force the game being 600 behind. A draw was the only way out for us. We needed a three to come in and consolidate. Maxwell should have got himself in and played a responsible innings. But no. He threw away his wicket and any chance we had of drawing the match.

2015-05-13T02:38:45+00:00

CW

Guest


Is it not up to the man himself to develop his own game. Like I say another solid shield season and he puts himself into test contention once again. Maxwell is very frustrating to watch. Must be an absolute nitemare for his coach and team mates. He has so much natural ability. But squanders it with rash shots. Temper his emotions and hone his technique and he could be anything.

AUTHOR

2015-05-13T02:32:19+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"brain explosion" is a bit over the top I think. Maxwell had been sent in at 3 to play very positively against Pakistan's spinners to try and put some pressure back on them. He batted really well in getting to 37, without a stupid shot in sight and then got done in the flight coming down the pitch. There was nothing wrong with his intent it was just a poorly executed shot as he lifted his head.

2015-05-13T02:31:53+00:00

Gav

Guest


Developing Maxwells red ball game should be one of our top priorities.

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