Australian ODI squad: No Lyon, no Lynn...yet

By Brett McKay / Expert

Like more than a few of you, I was surprised to hear Nathan Lyon and Chris Lynn had been left out of the first Australian one-day squad of the summer, named on Monday.

All the right noises were being made about seeing Lyon in the coloured gear this summer, especially with the team heading to the World Twenty20 in India in March and April. And if there’s a batsman in Australia currently striking the ball better than Lynn, well they’re not playing at a televised level.

Rather staggeringly though, neither were named in the 13-man squad for the first three ODIs against India, starting next week in Perth, followed by Brisbane and Melbourne.

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Predictably, the CA statement spoke of the inclusion of “exciting” young left-armer Joel Paris, why Test squad member Scott Boland “deserves this chance at the top level,” and how nearly 14 months since his last ODI, Kane Richardson is now “ready to perform consistently” at international level.

Great, yet another press release that says a lot of things without actually saying anything.

Why no Lyon, what more does he have to do? Matthew Wade, really? And is Shane Watson done at international level? We could only but guess the answers.

Fortunately, my trip back from Sydney coincided with a full morning’s cricket coverage from ABC Grandstand, even if there was precious little cricket being played.

And while their coverage of covers going on and off at the SCG was surprisingly entertaining, the guests they managed to wrangle into the commentary box during the very wet morning session were quite informative.

The most enlightening of all was national selection panel member Trevor Hohns, who along with Mark Waugh, NSP chairman Rod Marsh, and Australian coach Darren Lehmann, were responsible for putting together the ODI squad.

Interestingly, the first admission Hohns made was that away from what he termed “a core group of players”, we are indeed trialling new players with an eye toward the next Cricket World Cup.

Which, yes, is more than three years away.

But one of the first and deliberately instructive things he said was that this squad was just for the first three games in the five-game ODI series. And, furthermore, that the location of these first three games was a major factor in the selection of this squad.

For example, the first two games, in Perth and Brisbane, were the primary reason Josh Hazlewood was included in the squad. He will almost certainly sit out the remaining ODIs, reading between the lines, but Hohns had to concede that Hazlewood’s durability this summer was both surprising and pleasing for the NSP, given they had suggested not long ago that he wouldn’t be able to play all six Tests.

This theme continued on when addressing the omission of Lyon.

“The location of the first couple of games, we would only play one spinner, and that’s probably a spinning allrounder,” Hohns said. “Glenn Maxwell, you’d probably have to acknowledge, has done a pretty good job taking care of the spin bowling when it’s required.

“It possibly is [a risk not playing a frontline spinner], but I go back to where we’re playing the first couple of games, in particular. And we might find for the last couple of game there will be another spinner included; we haven’t discussed that as yet, but the opportunity may be there to introduce another spinner.”

That last statement is the kicker, and provides a strong hint that Lyon is likely to play in the final ODIs against India, on the slower Manuka Oval wicket in Canberra, and at the SCG.

“He’s a serious contender [for the WT20], because where we are going and where it’s being played, we will obviously need a couple of spinners,” Hohns told Gerard Whateley and Simon Katich.

It was similarly encouraging news for Lynn, with Hohns confirming that he’s on both the 50 and 20-over selectorial radar.

“Very much so. He’s really putting his name forward too, not just for T20, but for one-day cricket as well, and once again, there may be an opportunity later in the one-day series to have a look at somebody like that.”

As with Lyon, Lynn also appears in line for an appearance later in the India series, for what would be his ODI debut. On Australian wickets, with the ball coming onto him nicely, I’m sure he’ll do very well in this current vein of form. But I wonder if his vastly inferior T20 record on the subcontinent and in the Caribbean might work against him when it comes to the WT20?

Wicketkeeper Matthew Wade has won the first opportunity to succeed Brad Haddin, but Hohns made it clear that the Victorian gloveman shouldn’t take his selection for granted, mentioning the form keeper-bat of the BBL (getting bowled by Xavier Doherty notwithstanding), and a very promising young gun from the west:

“Yeah, Tim Paine has been very good this summer, hasn’t he,” Hohns said. “He fell by the wayside a little bit last year, I think, but his form this year has been outstanding. Sam Whiteman, earlier in the season was as well, so we’ve got a couple there who will keep the pressure on ‘Wadey’.”

And what of Shane Watson? It was far from the glowing endorsement coming from a national selector:

“Well, if we’re talking one-day cricket, his form in the Matador Cup was probably not where he would like it to have been, and certainly not what we’d liked it to have been. If we look at our squad, we’ve got Mitchell Marsh, young bloke; James Faulkner, young bloke; and Glenn Maxwell; we’ve got three allrounders there and we think we’re adequately covered.

“He’s definitely not out of the picture. Like everybody that plays and is available, they’re not out of the picture.”

This might sound promising for the burly allrounder, but Hohns appeared to be singing from a similar songsheet soon after when asked about the evergreen Brad Hogg.

“Once again, we’d never say ‘never’, but we may well move on from there I think.”

The WT20, then, seems Watson’s best chance for a national team swansong, with Hohns confirming, “with his experience over there, and he performs pretty well over there as well, so he’s a definite contender, put it that way.”

After that, though, Watson’s name and the phrase, “we’d never say ‘never’” might suddenly become paired up in national selector interviews.

So once again, the real story with the selection of an Australian team was not what was initially said, but what was subsequently explained after not being mentioned at all.

And it does, perhaps, appear as though the selectors are working to a plan for the limited-overs portion of the summer.

The Crowd Says:

2016-01-07T10:46:40+00:00

andyR

Guest


So does this article even list what the squad is???

2016-01-06T02:25:17+00:00

Anwar

Guest


Khawaja was the best matador batsman in 2013 and 2014 and deserves to be in the one day side more rhen any other domestic batsman, the fact he has proven himself at test level means he deserves this more then ever now, at least get him in the squad

2016-01-06T00:58:14+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


Handscomb's lack of glovework may go against his selection. But on batting alone he should get the nod. I love the way he uses his feet against the spinners. Just the ticket against those clever subcontinental tweakers.

2016-01-06T00:44:34+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


I wanna see the selectors take a gamble and pick Travis Head for Maxwell. Maxie continues to be inconsistent... He is as useful a bowler as Maxwell and is more reliable with the bat. Mitch Marsh in for Watson. I also like Handscomb. Is a better batsman that either Wade and Paine and is excellent against spin. Smith, Bailey, M Marsh and Head are also competent against spin. Only Finch is the weak link there. I also like Behrendorff but Richardson and Laughlin are specialist T20 bowlers. My squad:. Warner, Finch, Smith, Bailey, Lynn, Head, M Marsh, Handscomb, Faulkner, Hazlewood, Lyon, S Marsh, Boyce, Richardson, Laughlin.

2016-01-06T00:34:17+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


" contributing decent runs" Watson has had one decent knock in the BBL.. Only had one good game with the ball as well. CA did not pick him in the ODI side for a reason. Why should they pick him in the T20 side. Read the signs Watto and retire from all forms.

2016-01-05T19:09:48+00:00

blanco

Guest


"I find it amazing that there hasn’t been more mention of Khawaja as he is the best domestic one day batsman over the last 3 years along with white" The perception is Khawaja will struggle to score at a decent rate ( not that I agree but it is as it is). I think they rate Lynn highly but he is frequently injured.

2016-01-05T07:47:32+00:00

Anwar

Guest


Yes must get Khawaja in, he is averaging over 100 in his last 5 games

2016-01-05T05:39:34+00:00

Offsideman

Roar Rookie


Completely agree khawaja has not been mentioned at all because he hasn't played any matador cup recently. Who cares? He's in form and can bat at three as easily as open. Get rid of Shaunt marsh

2016-01-05T05:33:23+00:00

Offsideman

Roar Rookie


I'd say you pick khawaja because he is the future and in prime form. Sean marsh is a brilliant domestic player but he's not gunna be a number three in all formats for the next three years khawaja will. Give him and Lyon a shot

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T04:31:08+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


You're certainly not wrong, Mr M. Trevor Hohns made that very point, that spin will be needed for the WT20..

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T04:27:37+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


At the moment Kev, you'd imagine Marsh and Bailey are competing for the final batting spot, in all probability. Depending on who wins out probably dictates whether Smith bats at 3 or 4..

2016-01-05T04:10:37+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


That's a good shout as well. I guess for the 1st time in a while there is going to be genuine competition for spots on the back of good sustained form.

2016-01-05T04:06:06+00:00

Mr.Media

Roar Rookie


Australia has played fast bowlers continually for years at T20 and won nothing. You can't win without spin bowling. SPIN bowling is No.1, and there is nothing you can do about it. Tell me I'm wrong...

2016-01-05T04:03:03+00:00

Red Kev

Roar Guru


It isn't amazing at all. He only played two Matador Cup matches this season and although he averages 51 in List-A matches in calendar year 2015, he's an opener in the 50-over format and Finch and Warner have those spots with Shaun Marsh already in the side who can also open.

2016-01-05T03:59:41+00:00

Red Kev

Roar Guru


Surely the "next in line" opener behind Finch and Warner is Shaun Marsh. Khawaja has played hardly any 50-over cricket (perhaps one or two Matador Cup matches - just checked, 7 50-over matches at 51 in 2015) and just the one T20 game to prove his fitness for tests. Sure his form is good, but in the limited overs formats I'd pick Marsh over Khawaja (the opposite of what I would select for the tests). Marsh can open, and that lets you bring in Chris Lynn who is far more important to get in the side than Khawaja.

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T03:49:35+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Pretty much my thoughts on Boland exactly Joey. I do look forward to being impressed though..

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T03:48:30+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


I don't imagine he'd be around the Sixers' sessions, Joey, being the Thunder's 'Governor'. And Wasn't Boland released to go back to the Stars?

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T03:46:47+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Unless that's when Lynn comes in..

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T03:45:53+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


But what about their form right now? They're both hitting the ball very well, and someone has to miss out. Marsh is one of the leading run scorers in the BBL, Khawaja is in excellent Test form. How do you pick one over the other in another format altogether?

2016-01-05T03:35:18+00:00

Joey Johns

Roar Guru


Double post, ignore

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