Meet Chadd Sayers, Australia's unlikely new Test paceman

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Chadd Sayers seemed destined never to play international cricket due to Australia’s pace obsession. Now the swing bowler is a realistic chance to make his Test debut next month in New Zealand.

Unlike Australian quicks Mitchell Starc, James Pattinson and Josh Hazlewood – who all were identified as national prospects while still in their teens – Sayers had to scrap his way into the Australian setup.

In fact, just graduating into state ranks was a graft for the medium pacer. It took him four consecutive top-three finishes in the Bradman Medal, awarded to the best player in Adelaide grade cricket, before he finally made his debut for the Redbacks, at age 23.

And he was 25 years old by the time he started getting a regular game for SA in the 2012-13 season. Apparently, Sayers’ lack of pace had long put off the SA selectors, just as it seems to have done with the Australian panel.

More cricket:
» The Khawaja snub: Now it’s personal
» Can Steve Smith win another Allan Border Medal tonight?
» Street cricket at sundown on Australia Day
» Scorecard: Australia vs India T20

That 2012-13 summer he showed the SA hierarchy how foolish they had been to doubt him, as he topped the Sheffield Shield wicket-taking list with 48 wickets at 18.

Over the past four summers, only Queensland stalwart James Hopes has taken more Shield wickets than Sayers. The South Australian has accumulated 145 first-class wickets at an average of 25. But it is his frugalness – he concedes a Glenn McGrath-like 2.62 runs per over – which sets him apart, and may help vault him into the Test side.

What makes Sayers’ career record all the more impressive is that, as a Redback, he is based on the flattest Shield pitch in the country at Adelaide Oval. Sayers has thrived on that batsman-friendly surface, taking 47 wickets at an average of 25 there in first-class cricket.

At the MCG, SCG, Gabba, WACA and Bellerive Oval, Sayers has taken 75 wickets at 23 in first-class cricket, underlining his ability to adapt to a range of conditions.

And he is the sort of bowler who is less suited to Australian pitches than those in New Zealand, which may well be similar to the seaming decks on which Australia floundered in England last year.

Accurate swing-and-seam merchants like Sayers have dominated England’s domestic scene decade after decade on such pitches. Australia found in the last Ashes that blast-them-out quicks Starc and Mitchell Johnson were not suited to those surfaces, on which accuracy, patience and guile are the key.

Those three attributes are the core of Sayers’ game. He does not seek to bowl magic deliveries which rattle stumps and leave batsmen confounded. Rather, he backs himself to outthink and outlast his opponents, settling in on a perfect line and length and using his mastery of swing and seam movement.

Short in stature and operating mostly in the 125-130km/h range, he has no intimidation factor. But in an Australian attack which boasts the express James Pattinson and the 196 centimetre Hazlewood, there is no need for it.

Sayers is a role player, the kind of steady operator who makes his bowling colleagues more effective by consistently building pressure on the batsmen with dot balls.

He has the reliability of Peter Siddle but can also swing it both ways with new and old ball – something Australia have not had since perhaps Damien Fleming in the 1990s.

After his shock call-up to the Test squad, Sayers told the media he had thought he was not the kind of bowler the Australian selectors were looking for.

“I was never going to bowl 140km/h, so if that was their (selectors) criteria I was never going to fit that,” Sayers said. “But obviously they’ve picked for New Zealand conditions with Jackson Bird getting selected as well – he’s the same sort of bowler as me.”

With Pattinson and Siddle currently battling fitness issues, there is an outside chance both Bird and Sayers could play in the first Test against the Kiwis in Wellington from February 12.

Combined with the economical Hazlewood, that would be the most precise and dependable pace attack Australia have fielded in years.

It also would be one tailor made for a seaming pitch, if that is what is served up in Wellington. More likely, Sayers and Bird will be competing for one spot in the Australian bowling unit.

Either man would be a good pick as Australia look to move away from their pace-first mantra and pursue a wiser, horses-for-courses selection policy.

The Crowd Says:

2016-01-27T08:59:00+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


not sure how it works for wherever you are mate, but it's breakfast Test cricket here!

AUTHOR

2016-01-27T08:47:47+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Cheers Brett, hopefully we'll get a good look at him against NZ

2016-01-27T08:39:53+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Even now, I have enjoyed those bowlers that can contain under 6/over. The bats have made the old 4/over economy rate equivalent now 6 to 6.5. A batting average now of 55 is equivalent to the old 38/39. If you make the adjustments, it is still great. Mind you, yes...I want a pitch that flies, cuts, bounces and then settles down until it takes spin. Curators can do that. They just need to be given permission. I think cricket administrators are the last to see that spectators don't always want 6s. Commentators can help there by talking down the Chris Gayle and Chris Lynn slogs and begin to talk up (as do Hussey and Brayshaw) the gorgeous cricket shots of Kohli, Williamson, Khawaja and Marsh (I got him in there).

2016-01-27T08:27:21+00:00

VivGilchrist

Guest


If the bat-a-thons continue it will no longer be the glorious product.

2016-01-27T07:25:03+00:00

jamesb

Guest


"As a young fella it was the wickets falling which drew me to the game." As "VivGilchrist", I thought you enjoyed fours and sixes.

2016-01-27T07:05:56+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Not if you reject the glorious product we call cricket.

2016-01-27T06:40:14+00:00

VivGilchrist

Guest


Cricket in Australia is leaning more and more towards the batsmen. As a young fella it was the wickets falling which drew me to the game. Wickets just don't seem to fall as much anymore. Maybe I will one day lose interest if all we witness are bat-a-thons. The big question is my WA friend, will you miss me?

2016-01-27T06:33:44+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


"...i think I’ll end up giving it away..." You didn't mean that?

2016-01-27T06:02:31+00:00

VivGilchrist

Guest


C'mon Don be positive. Pretend his name is Chadd Marsh if that helps you.

2016-01-27T05:32:27+00:00

VivGilchrist

Guest


Interesting take Don. I will re-iterate... I... am ... bored.... of ..... Lifeless.... Aussie..... Pitches. What can you possibly manipulate from that?

2016-01-27T04:59:02+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Good stuff, Ronan. I still really haven't seen a lot of Sayers, so I kind of hope he gets a run!

2016-01-27T04:58:18+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


He comes up on every other thread, so one on bowling is just as relevant..

2016-01-27T04:56:44+00:00

Andrew Pelechaty

Roar Rookie


That's wonderful news for Chadd. Cricket Australia's obsession with "sexy" express bowlers is unhealthy. Our greatest pace bowler - Glenn McGrath - bowled 130-odd and took over 500 Test wickets. Express pace is all well and good, but too much of it is predictable. Class batsmen will get used to the pace and use it to their advantage. Hopefully Chadd gets a decent go in NZ,

2016-01-27T03:06:43+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


I can only hope you're right about the pitches Ronan. Never seen Sayers bowl but as a SA resident I'm glad one of our players is in the squad. I'll be interested to watch him bowl, I've been hanging out for a good swing bowler since Flemming and still have memories of Alderman in England, could Sayers be in these guys league?

2016-01-27T02:18:56+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Brett says, ??.

2016-01-27T02:17:23+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Yes. It explain how, at times when the ball is moving, he gets bulk wickets and then has times where he can't penetrate and goes for runs.

2016-01-27T02:17:12+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


I'd probably have Khawaja in instead of Sayers and open the bowling with him ;) Am I on the wrong thread?

2016-01-27T01:45:34+00:00

Gav

Guest


His played a lot of his cricket on the Adelaide freeway Don.......

2016-01-27T01:19:14+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


It would certainly be interesting to see how he goes - but he probably won't play, as there are only two Tests and I suspect Bird will be viewed as the first reserve.

2016-01-27T01:12:32+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Don, I understand what you are saying, however Sayers FC record show's he's never ever been cannon fodder. Whether he can replicate that in International Cricket is still to be seen, but I certainly feel he earned his chance.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar