Adam Voges treading the Mike Hussey path

By David Lord / Expert

There’s a startling similarity in the Test careers of Mike Hussey and Adam Voges.

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For starters, they are both Perth born-and-bred Western Australians, and both were shamefully treated by national selectors before they belatedly won their first baggy green.

Hussey was 30 and had scored over 17,000 first-class runs before he debuted, against the West Indies at the Gabba in November 2005.

Voges was 35 with over 11,000 first-class runs when he debuted, also against the West Indies, but in Rosseau in June this year.

Hussey scored one on debut, but Voges became the oldest in history to score a Test century first up, finishing with an unbeaten 130.

In his first 17 digs, Hussey scored 1, 29, 137, 31*, 133*, 30*, 23, 58, 122, 31, 45, 6, 14*, 75, 73, 89, and 23. That’s a total of 920 at 70.77.

Voges’ first 17 were 130*, 37, 31, 1, 25, 16, 0, 1, 51*, 76, 83*, 1*, 41, 119, 13, 28, and 174*, for 827 at 68.91.

Both had three Test tons to their credit at the same stage.

Hussey finished his stellar career with 6235 runs at 51.52 from 79 Tests, with 19 tons, and 29 half-centuries – a magnificent batsman.

With Voges at 36, even as fit as he is, it’s doubtful he has another 68 Tests in him to match Hussey. But if Voges can end his Test career with an average over 50, he will have matched Hussey as a valued middle-order batsman.

Thursday was yet another example of how valuable Voges is to the current line-up.

With Joe Burns (33), vice-captain David Warne (64), and skipper Steve Smith (10) back in the shed at 3-121 against the West Indies at Bellerive, an early Voges departure would have been catastrophic.

By stumps he was unbeaten on 174, and had found at staunch ally in Shaun Marsh, fighting to retain his berth, also unbeaten on 139, and Australia 3-438.

Their unfinished 317-run fourth-wicket stand is second only to Michael Clarke and Ricky Ponting’s all-time Bellerive record partnership of 352, set against Pakistan in 2010.

And the current pair haven’t finished yet.

There must be something in the water, because Marsh is Western Australian born and bred as well – but at Narrogin, 192 kilometres south-east of Perth.

Matters not, all three are very proud Western Australians.

The Crowd Says:

2015-12-13T13:48:10+00:00

Dylan Matthews

Roar Guru


Voges performance on International Test Arena just goes to show how guys aged in their mid-thirties still have the ability to make a substantial impact. It's now 922 runs at 76.8 for Voges after 11 Test matches whilst Chris Rogers finished his career with 2015 runs at an average of 42.8 after returning to the national side at 36 years of age. The selectors should no longer be scared to select guys like Michael Klinger and regardless of age players should be rewarded on form alone rather than the age bracket they happen to be within.

2015-12-12T23:40:34+00:00

Chris Love

Guest


In the end it ended up on 269* for 922 @ 76.83. His ability to be patient like Hussey is going to see him with quite a few not outs* next to his name when he retires and I'm betting he'll finish with an average North of Hussey's and possibly even 2nd on the all time list. I think he's good enough.

2015-12-12T08:11:08+00:00

CricketCynic

Guest


Do you mean both players only scored runs in Australia?

2015-12-10T23:47:13+00:00

mattyb

Guest


The article seems a bit over the top. I'd say Voges is more treading the path of Rogers.

2015-12-10T23:00:47+00:00

Armchair Expert

Guest


I also wonder how David Hussey would of handled test cricket if given a chance a few years ago, it's always amazed me how the selectors preferred North to him.

2015-12-10T22:08:51+00:00

My2cents

Guest


Voges could be gone sooner then you. Think. Especially if S Marsh keeps scoring runs. There is little reason to keep a mid 30's batsman around under the best of circumstances

2015-12-10T20:43:14+00:00

Max

Guest


I wouldn't say that Voges was unfairly treated by selectors. He never really had the average to get himself into the team until he had 2 massive seasons after which he was picked.

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