David Warner key to Australian success in Ashes 2015

By Saurebh Gandle / Roar Guru

Back in 2009 Virender Sehwag predicted that David Warner will play Test cricket. Fast forward to 2015 he has surely surpassed Sehwag’s wildest expectations.

The first Australian in 132 years to play for the national team without playing any first class cricket has repaid the faith shown in him by Australian selectors.

He averages 46.83 in 38 Tests with 12 hundreds at strike rate of 75, which proves he belongs to the Test arena. Interestingly, nine of those hundreds have come after the 2013 Ashes in Australia where he was one of the chief destroyers of England’s bowling, with five hundreds in succession.

Warner was also part of the winning World Cup squad and the leading run scorer in IPL 2015, and is without a doubt key to Australia’s Ashes bid. He has scored runs in India, South Africa, UAE and Australia. Next in line is the most classic battle of all time – the Ashes against England.

England is going to be on his mind as he did not have a great time last time around in Ashes 2013, scoring just a half century in three matches which Australia went on to lose 3-0. Come July 8 he will have five Test matches to prove himself.

While Australia seems to be the favourite on the back of the World Cup and a Test series win against West Indies, England at home are as strong as any top ranked team.

Jimmy Anderson with duke ball is always penetrative along with Stuart Broad who is always at you. To add to it there is the in-form Steve Finn, Mark Wood, Liam Plunkett and Chris Jordan. In batting Alastair Cook is slowly getting to back his best, Adan Lyth had a good series against the Kiwis and add to that Joe Root, Jos Butler and all rounder Ben Stokes, and you are in for a contest here.

Any complacency could see Australia fall behind in the series. But Knowing Australia they will be well prepared to handle it. With Mitchell Johnson, Mitchell Starc, Ryan Harris, Josh Hazlewood, along with Peter Siddle and ever improving Nathan Lyon, Australia have a good headache to pick three pacemen to field in first Test at Cardiff.

Given the quality of bowling on both sides it’s clear that the series will be decided on who bats well. David Warner at top becomes key here.

His attacking instincts coupled with his ability to play big innings could take the game away from the opposition. If Warner gets going Australia could find themselves with 400-450 runs on the first day, giving themselves a good chance to win the match.

As you move down the batting order they have Steven Smith at number three, current number one batsmen in Tests, with Michael Clarke at number four with Adam Voges and Brad Haddin to follow. On paper it looks very good.

Yet Smith may not be best suited to number three given the conditions in England, while Clarke has not been consistent for some time and Voges is still adjusting to the national level. Brad Haddin has only scored 230 runs in his last 15 innings, further making the line-up vulnerable.

So it becomes important for Warner to make big runs and at a strike rate which demoralises the opposition. He needs to take the pressure off the entire team.

This series, like the Ashes in the past, will be decided on who bats better, which team makes crucial moments count, taking those half chances and who attacks or counterattacks when needed. It is a perfect platform for Dave Warner.

Expect Dave Warner to be in the news in coming weeks. Whether it will be for his talking or batting we will have to wait and watch.

But surely this could turn out to be the series of the year with a few close matches, a tight finish and a dramatic collapse. It will be worth watching.

The Crowd Says:

2015-06-28T07:54:05+00:00

ajay dandriyal

Roar Rookie


nah ! my money is on big fella (hazey) & voges,but the interesting point is marsh(101) vs watto(81) ? surely marsh should be in playing x1 after 70 and now 101 ?

2015-06-28T04:46:02+00:00

TheCunningLinguistic

Guest


What makes you so sure that Voges will be batting? I disagree, I think they will keep Marsh in, with Voges as backup.

2015-06-28T00:19:26+00:00

Rob JM

Guest


Warner became a star after he met his lovely wife and learnt what hard work looked like. Hopefully he can overcome the sleep depravation of being a new dad! (shouldn't be a problem on tour) Clarke's problem is that he is being impatient with his batting and keeps getting out when he tries to accelerate. He just needs to slow down in his old age and success will return. The two key things that will decide this ashes are:- 1/ Can the english batsmen post competitive totals against the australian bowlers. 2/ Can the Australian selector resist handicapping themselves by picking old, out of form passengers and playing batsmen out of position. Its pretty obvious that they should include Rogers, S Marsh and Voges in the batting line up, which with Voges handy spinners means that Watson should miss out.

2015-06-27T21:41:11+00:00

Mattw

Guest


Happy to give Warner the keys to our success, I think that if he gets back into his 2014 best (slightest of recent blips in output recently) then our ashes is a basic guarantee. That said talking down our other batsmen especially smith is a bit on the pessimistic, smith is in a form right now that is absolutely insane, the idea that his technique is going to fail at three is people trying to pick holes to talk him down, he moves around but is stable at the time of release and the fact he is further across isn't really affecting given he is so aware of where his stumps are. Voges may be inexperienced at test level but with so much first class cricket behind him, including an excellent amount in English conditions I think you can be fairly confident of his unflappability and performance in most cases. I will however concede that Clarke hasn't been as consistent as I would like but he is still usually making a score of some sort recently (last 3 scores including Kent 40+) so again I'm not particularly worried. I think people in general have a tendency (I'm certainly guilty of it) of talking down our chances and players in a lot of areas to prevent disappointment in failure. It's better than talking them up to much (5-0 whitewash calls are nuts I think) but really I'm fairly happy of where most of our batsmen sit and my only true concern is our all rounder spot.

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