No Hazlewood, Haddin in my combined Ashes XI

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

As I wrote recently, the upcoming Ashes will be a closely fought series. This became even clearer when I compiled a composite Ashes XI and found how even the line-ups were.

Judging by comments from Roarers over the past few weeks, many of you believe Australia are a lay-down misère not only to retain the Ashes but to win the series in England.

Some Australian fans have become even more confident of this in the wake of the two recent series in the Caribbean.

Seeing England limp through their three Tests against the Windies, only for Australia to utterly destroy the home side, has convinced a lot of cricket followers that the Ashes will be one-sided.

It may well be. The joy of cricket is that it is wildly unpredictable. When England arrived Down Under in late 2013 they were raging favourites, fresh from a 3-1 Ashes win at home and having slaughtered Australia on their last visit.

Then they received the cricketing equivalent of an atomic wedgie. Who knows what will unfold when the Ashes starts in just under two weeks’ time?

Anyway, here is my combined Ashes XI:

1. David Warner (Australia)
2. Alastair Cook (England)
3. Steve Smith (Australia)
4. Gary Ballance (England)
5. Michael Clarke (Australia)
6. Ben Stokes (England)
7. Jos Buttler (England)
8. Mitchell Johnson (Australia)
9. Ryan Harris (Australia)
10. Nathan Lyon (Australia)
11. James Anderson (England)

The opening combination was made easy to pick by Alastair Cook’s recent spike in form. The English skipper may not have looked imperious at the crease over the past six months but he has been prolific nonetheless.

David Warner’s form has dipped in recent Tests yet he remains the most fearsome top-order batsman in Test cricket. He’s an automatic selection. So, too, is his teammate Steve Smith. I’ve written enough about him recently to explain how he has earned this spot.

I do, however, expect a strong debate to centre around my selection of Gary Ballance at four. The only other alternatives were Ian Bell, who has been out of form for almost two years, and Adam Voges, who has played only two Tests.

Ballance, too, is inexperienced at Test level having played just 13 matches. There are also justifiable concerns about his ability to prosper against quality pace bowling. In his three Tests against New Zealand and Australia he has floundered, making just 61 runs at an average of 10.

Meanwhile, he has butchered the pace-poor attacks of India, Sri Lanka and the West Indies. But the fact remains that, at just 25 years old, he has 1096 Test runs to his name at the brilliant average of 52.

Michael Clarke slots into this side at his preferred spot of five. The Australian captain owns a phenomenal record, although he has been all-or-nothing over the past 18 months or so. Like Ballance, he had fairly limited competition for this spot.

Had Mitch Marsh played in the West Indies ahead of Shane Watson there may have been a closer battle for the all-rounder position in this Ashes team. As it is, Ben Stokes grabbed it thanks to his match-winning display against New Zealand, the kind of performance Watson has not produced at a meaningful juncture in years.

The wicketkeeping position was similarly easy to decide upon. As I wrote last week, Australian gloveman Brad Haddin has been in abysmal form with the blade for almost 18 months, averaging only 15 from his past 11 Tests.

While Haddin has been labouring, Jos Buttler has been flourishing. I was skeptical whether Buttler’s bash-em, crash-em style of batsmanship would work in the longest form. But he’s displayed a greater range of gears in his batting than some of us thought he possessed.

Buttler has made a wonderful start to his Test career, creaming 474 runs at 53 from eight matches. Some will argue Haddin is a better keeper. At this point, that is correct, although the margin is by no means massive. What is massive is the discrepancy in their contributions with the blade. And that proved decisive.

At eight, Mitchell Johnson inflicted a rare brand of terror upon England in the last Ashes. He followed that up with a scintillating effort as Australia beat the cocky Proteas 2-1 in South Africa.

Since then, though, he has been merely Mitch the Serviceable, rather than Mitch the Marauder. His pace, left-arm angle, lively fielding and destructive batting still make him highly valuable.

Sharing the new ball with him would be veteran seamer Ryan Harris. No bowler has been more consistently brilliant, in all conditions, over the past few years, aside from South African champion Dale Steyn.

This composite team’s spin duties would be handled by Nathan Lyon. Moeen Ali may be a handy all-round cricketer but, judged purely on bowling ability, this is a no contest.

The final spot in the side was not easy to decide upon. Young beanpole Josh Hazlewood has been astoundingly impressive in his short career. His bowling in the West Indies on dead pitches was of the quality and consistency we used to see from Glenn McGrath.

It is incredibly difficult to leave him out of this side and I think that by the end of the upcoming Ashes he will be in this XI. Right now, though, Johnson, Harris and James Anderson have a far larger catalogue of performances to point to.

I do not rate Anderson nearly as highly as do many English cricket followers, but you cannot argue with his statistical returns over the past 12 months.

So, that’s my team. With six Australians and five Englishman it could not be more delicately balanced.

The Crowd Says:

2015-12-19T03:45:16+00:00

Sanjay Poojar

Guest


Must b Virat and Sami india number 1

2015-07-02T09:01:14+00:00

Lachlan DAvidson

Guest


Starc should be the first fast bowler selected in this team. 150km, massive in-swingers, unbelieveable bumper, stands at 2m. Is sure to carve up in English conditions.

2015-07-01T02:48:13+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Shaun may well have scored more than Vogesy if he batted higher. WA was that dominant, they tended to have only one innings so, at number 5, he didn't always get to bat as much as Vogesy and Klinger. An average of 70 was pretty good and his Oz average in the last year signals he is definitely one of our best.

2015-07-01T02:40:59+00:00

13th Man

Guest


I think Hazelwood will outbowl him this series!

2015-07-01T02:39:46+00:00

13th Man

Guest


umm, you do realise its an Australia and England combined team don't you?

2015-07-01T02:38:34+00:00

13th Man

Guest


yes i don't think we need an all rounder. Voges, Clarke and Smith can all bowl

2015-07-01T02:37:18+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Don, no way is S. Marsh ahead of Voges. Who scored the most runs in the Shield season. I would also pick Mitch above his brother!

2015-06-30T02:30:48+00:00

Joel

Roar Rookie


hard to justify leaving anderson out (as much as I loathe the clown) being that his record is what it is

2015-06-30T02:28:55+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Voges over Ballance Hazelwood over Anderson Oh and Joe Root over Stokes.

2015-06-27T21:40:55+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


Marsh still hasn't put clear water between him and Watson. Typical of Watson to whack it to a fielder in the 80s.

2015-06-27T14:20:48+00:00

Mattw

Guest


Ronan you did not post an article today, where do I post my thoughts on the Kent game? I suppose here will do again. Well I was surprised how long the tail stuck around for and I'm not sure whether I can chalk it up to a lack of penetration or threat by marsh and Ahmed or good batting, but was interesting. Both rogers and Clarke really started hitting harder once they were in, are they happy to just get 40 odd and bat out you think? I thought time at the crease might be good for Clarke a bit more than what he looked for at least, but I suppose it is a second innings. More important is Watson and marsh contest.

2015-06-27T13:28:37+00:00

James T

Guest


If Neville was keeping I'd be happy to have an all rounder, but he's not. Haddins batting lately is not good enough to carry someone struggling to average 30. We need a specialist bat at 6, most likely marsh but if his form has held I'd consider Neville at 6

2015-06-27T08:57:50+00:00

Sanjay Poojar

Guest


That is becos he from Pakistan not India

2015-06-27T04:32:29+00:00

Mitcher

Guest


As opposed to the gravitas of your comment...

2015-06-27T02:15:07+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


Mitchell Marsh went at 4.83 from six overs as well, with Watson not bowling. Only Siddle and Johnson have respectable figures so far, unless you count Smith's solitary over.

2015-06-27T02:07:29+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


I see that Fawad Ahmed went at over five an over last night. Hopefully an aberration, but certainly let off any pressure that may have remained on Lyon's spot for the near future.

AUTHOR

2015-06-27T00:56:34+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Good workout for the Aussie bowlers last night on what, by all accounts, is a really lifeless pitch. You get the feeling the pitches for the Tests will be similar so it's a good test for Johnson and co. Apparently Johnson bowled really well - Kent veteran batsmen Robert Key absolutely heaped praise on him. Meanwhile, Harris reportedly wasn't at his peak pace, but bowled accurately. The XI for the second warmup next week should tell us what the first Test team will be. If Harris doesn't play he's obviously not going to get a run at Cardiff.

2015-06-26T18:51:25+00:00

ColinP

Guest


As an England fan I would love to see marsh play instead of Rogers... Rogers is taking a lot of heat in the English press over ashes tickets stuff, mcc and Middlesex not happy. One journalist apparently asked rogers whether he knew that the current sentence for Rogers actions, whether unintentional or not, was 1 year in prison. He might be in the clink by Cardiff!

2015-06-26T18:46:48+00:00

ColinP

Guest


So you would pick someone who has never played an International match over someone who is averaging 50 in test cricket, and 50 in list a cricket with his two fastest hundreds of all time for his country, 60 odd balls each. Buttler is actually a v respectable keeper, much better than matt prior when he started out. I would argue if buttler, stokes, root and ballance were Australian they would all be playing in the test side (ballance to take Clarkes spot perhaps in following post ashes retirement.)

2015-06-26T18:39:42+00:00

ColinP

Guest


I think Harris is struggling, word is he was bowling bought 83 mph at Kent. If he bowls like that in the next warm up he won't play. Lehmann has made it clear he needs pace

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