Pattinson the Aussie to watch in 2016

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

James Pattinson showed enough in Australia’s series win against the West Indies to suggest he is back on track to become a Test star. With 13 wickets at 22, reaching speeds up to 154km/h, Pattinson reminded us of his rare gifts.

2015 was the year the likes of Australia’s Josh Hazlewood, Sri Lanka’s Dinesh Chandimal and Pakistan’s Sarfraz Ahmed went from virtual no-names to highly valuable Test players.

Which players will make a similarly big leap in 2016?

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Hazlewood remarkably started 2015 with just two Tests under his belt and finished it with selection in the ICC Test Team of the Year.

Joining him in that ICC team was wicketkeeper Sarfraz, who only became a regular in the Pakistan Test side in 2014 and then flourished last year, coupling his neat keeping with some dynamic batting, which saw him average 52 for the year at a scorching strike rate of 81.

Fellow gloveman Chandimal, meanwhile, must have been awfully close to beating Sarfraz into the ICC team. He was selected in The Guardian’s Test Team of 2015 after a prolific year in which he was the seventh-highest scorer in Tests, with 901 runs at 47, including two centuries.

I have picked three players I predict will have breakout years in 2016, cementing themselves as stars of Test cricket. All three made startling beginnings to their Test career, before having long periods away from the highest level for varied reasons.

Steven Finn (England, 26 years old) – 110 wickets at 29 from 28 Tests
The beanpole seamer’s career figures already are impressive. But he hasn’t had a long run in the England Test team since emerging as a key strike weapon in 2010 as a then 21-year-old.

Finn endured a problem with kicking the stumps in his delivery stride, before then making the ill-fated change of shortening his run-up on the advice of former England bowling coach David Saker.

He lost the searing pace that had made such an impression in 2010 and as a result, after playing 11 Tests in his debut year, Finn managed only 12 matches over the following four calendar years. From the 2013 Ashes to the 2015 Ashes he went two years without playing a Test for England.

On return, he sliced Australia with eight wickets and has not looked back. He moves the ball just enough through the air and off the pitch and has greatly improved his accuracy. Most strikingly, Finn’s 201-centimetre frame and high-arm action allow him to earn disconcerting bounce even from flat pitches.

Mohammad Amir (Pakistan, 23 years old) – 51 wickets at 29 from 14 Tests
Six years ago, I believed Amir was on target to perhaps become the greatest paceman Test cricket ever had seen. At just 17 years old, Amir already was an elite international cricketer, possessed not just of unnerving pace but also of great control and deft skills.

Some of the finest pacemen in history could not swing the ball both ways yet Amir had mastered that art while still at high school age. During his brief international career, Amir produced several of the most breathtaking spells of pace bowling I have witnessed.

Capable of hooping the ball in either direction at up to 150km/h an hour, he made a fool of the Australians in England in 2009 as a 17-year-old. He returned to the UK the following year and did the same thing to the then-mighty England side.

It was, however, during this series that his career and life took a savagely wrong turn. Amir was caught up in the huge spot-fixing scandal and subsequently handed a five-year ban from the game. Now he’s about to return and few things about cricket in 2016 excite me more.

Amir is set to launch his comeback in the limited overs formats against New Zealand this month. He has told media that he is targeting Pakistan’s mid-year tour of England to make his return in Test cricket. Look out England, even with his long absence from international cricket, Amir looks set to tear the game apart.

James Pattinson (Australia, 25 years old) – 64 wickets at 26 from 16 Tests
Pattinson’s story is similar to Finn’s in that he stormed on to the Test scene before spending several years in the cricketing wilderness. Where Finn’s absence was due largely to issues of technique, it was Pattinson’s body which let him down.

Three years ago, Pattinson was the most imposing young cricketer in the Test game, having snared 37 wickets at 21 in his first eight Tests. Even on dead surfaces in India in 2013, as his side crumbled around him, Pattinson was a standout taking 6-109 in the first Test before his fitness began to wane.

Back troubles saw him bowl in a restricted fashion in two more Tests in that series plus in two Tests in the 2013 Ashes, during which his pace was down by more than 10km/h. He promptly broke down in England and spent the next two years riddled with injuries.

Now, three Tests back into his latest comeback, Pattinson looks to be benefiting from a matured body. Many express pacemen before him have been plagued by injuries in their early 20s before coming into their own in their mid-20s.

After clearly bowling within himself in the first two Tests against the West Indies, Pattinson seems to have developed some trust in both his body and his remodeled action and is back at close to top pace. At the SCG, his average pace was a very lively 140km/h, and he topped out at a frightening 154km/h.

Pattinson is yet to regain the consistent outswinger that he boasted before the remodeling of his action but his pace, aggression and determination should make him a major weapon for Australia in 2016.

The Crowd Says:

2016-01-09T07:33:49+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Agreed Pros. Starc is way out there though behind Steyn and slightly ahead of the ever improving Hazelwood. Pattinson isn't anywhere at this stage. He has bowled good spells but not as good as the same person before his injuries. That may change of course but he is about on par with Cummins. Cummins action may need to change more at delivery for his long term health. However I to think Amir is capable , based on his past, of quickly becoming the best fast bowler in the world.

2016-01-09T00:10:13+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


Behrendorff is dead unlucky. Is often talked about over coffee at selectors meetings but something or other stops him getting the nod for higher honors. Back stress fractures last summer, rather late in his career put paid to his latest effort to finally secure a baggy green or at the least a gold cap. Mark Waugh said just before the injury that he was on the verge of international selection. I think Boof and Rod want him bowling injury free for a while yet before they are ready to promote him.

2016-01-08T20:05:35+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


Paris has a very good List A record from the past 2 Matador series. They want a look at him. Fair enough.

2016-01-08T17:09:16+00:00

Prosenjit

Guest


To me 'the' fastest and most talented fast bowler now is starc,not just in australia but world cricket(besides steyn ofcourse).

2016-01-08T16:57:57+00:00

Prosenjit

Guest


Reaching speed upto 154kph! He did that really?

2016-01-08T13:05:36+00:00

Steele

Guest


Agreed, When fit Patto has been exceptional. He has had a great strike all throughout his career. Put simply he is a wicket taker. Hopefully the selectors don't persist with Siddle any longer. Line and length is great but a strike rate of 61 isn't good enough and they need to realise this.

2016-01-08T12:22:46+00:00

Ian

Guest


Beats me how Paris got picked for the ODI's ahead of Behrendorff. Mark Waugh on one of the BBL matches said something along the lines of he's just back from injury and we need to see him play some more cricket. Ahem, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Mr Waugh.

2016-01-08T11:58:22+00:00

danno

Guest


Behrendorf, how does he keep missing out ? Not even A Russell could tame him the other night, slower ball bouncer, incredible death bowling, smart bowler.

2016-01-08T11:01:40+00:00

Tom

Guest


Totally agree that Pattinson is the one to watch. He will rip teams apart this year and be our number 1 bowler. Crazy to think about our attack in the near future. Pattinson, Starc, Hazelwood, Cummins all have the potential to be greats of Australian cricket. I think in ten years time we will think of 3 of the above in the same light as McGrath and Lillee. We are about to enter into a new era of Australian dominance to match the "invincibles" and the "dominators" and it will be led by the bowlers.

AUTHOR

2016-01-08T10:36:47+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Bairstow's batting is coming along nicely but his glovework is well below Test standard - he is a liability keeping to spinners and has been coughing up chances off the quicks regularly too.

AUTHOR

2016-01-08T10:33:54+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I know people are excited by Paris and Stanlake but, for me, the guy that I'm most confident of becoming a quality international bowler is Behrendorff - in all 3 formats too.

AUTHOR

2016-01-08T10:32:28+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Yeah neither Boult nor Southee, particularly the latter, have unsettling pace. Pattinson doesn't have their accuracy at this stage but his extra 10kmh of pace is a major advantage if he can harness it.

2016-01-08T07:39:56+00:00

Julian King

Roar Guru


We'll see. I hope I'm wrong, but I wouldn't be putting my house on Cummins having a long career ahead of him. Not in test cricket anyway. I suspect his career will mirror that of Shane Bond more than Johnson, Lee et al.

2016-01-08T07:04:34+00:00

bryan

Guest


Seriously? McGrath didn't even debut till 23 in a test, and the bloke is "Finished" at 22? Listening to McGrath on the radio and how his training completely changed after his first test series because he realized it had to was very enlightening.

2016-01-08T06:40:35+00:00

Darren

Guest


They both swing the ball - but not at pace. Both Medium - Fast Medium at best. Boult and Southee struggle badly when conditions are not conducive.

2016-01-08T05:36:05+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Yeah ridiculous comment. Heard Mitch Johnson the other day say, when questioned about our young quicks being injured all the time,that he hardly bowled a ball till he was 24 because he was continually injured. As he said though, no one knew that because he wasn't as good as these young blokes. He was playing lower grade cricket. Brett lee is the same. He gad 3 back stress fractures in his early 20's. Once again no one knows that, because he was playing at the lower levels.

2016-01-08T04:02:19+00:00

Joel

Roar Rookie


Stanlake's spell in the BBL a few days ago was outstanding and he's only 21. With his very side on action he's a lot less likely to have the same issue with stress fractures that Pattinson, Cummins and Bird have all had issues with in the last few years.

2016-01-08T03:07:58+00:00

Jameswm

Guest


He's finished at 22? Huge, huge call. You might want to check out Mitch Johnson's career progress up to about 26.

2016-01-08T02:31:03+00:00

matth

Guest


I meant batting. He keeps like a cross between a boulder and Matthew Wade

2016-01-08T01:56:55+00:00

matth

Guest


Don't write off NCN and Behrendorff just yet either.

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