Australia needs a better Andrew Tye

By Daniel Jeffrey / Editor

Over the past couple of Big Bash seasons, few bowlers have been as consistent as Andrew Tye.

He has a plethora of slower balls, an accurate yorker and a damn good economy rate in Twenty20 matches as a result. In 25 matches, Tye’s economy of 7.4 is nothing short of impressive.

In short, the West Australian is exactly the kind of bowler Steve Smith would want in his squad for the upcoming T20 World Cup.

The problem is, he doesn’t seem to be adapting to the rigours of international cricket very well.

On his debut, Tye was excellent. He finished his four overs with figures of 1-28 and snared the big wicket of MS Dhoni.

His second match was far less profitable. After going for 12 in his penultimate over, Tye conceded 18 from the last over of the match as India snatched an unlikely victory.

Then in his last match against South Africa, Tye went at 12 an over, again haemorrhaging runs at the pointy end of the innings.

Tye currently has an international economy rate of 10.5, a strike rate of 34 and an average of 59.5. Those are not the stats of an international-quality player.

To be fair, three matches is hardly the most authoritative sample space, and in most other situations I’d be a strong advocate of giving Tye every chance to show his class on the big stage.

Unfortunately time isn’t on his side, nor is it on Australia’s for that matter. Just two games remain before their World T20 campaign kicks off, and the selectors will want to have a look at every player in their squad in that time.

That means Tye is likely to have just four more overs to prove his worth. He’ll have to do it against the likes of AB de Villiers, Faf du Plessis and David Miller.

At the selection table, he’ll have to do it over James Faulkner, Josh Hazlewood and Shane Watson, all of whom are far more proven quantities at international level.

Cricket is littered with a host of players who have failed to make the step up from domestic to international cricket. Clearly there is a significant adjustment to make when going from bowling to Travis Head and Chris Lynn to Suresh Raina and David Miller.

But Tye is the type of bowler who could prove to be an invaluable asset at the World T20. For Australia’s sake, let’s hope he makes that step up in time.

The Crowd Says:

2016-03-07T01:46:51+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


I’m with you Don, stepping up from the BBL to international level is still a very big jump. It’s going to take him some time to get there. Being a 20/20 fast bowler is probably the hardest job in international cricket. You have no margin for error, you’re expected to bowl at the toughest times for bowlers to bowl, in an uphill environment stacked heavily against you. It’s a thankless task.

2016-03-06T23:42:14+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


Haha, isn't it just.

2016-03-06T00:59:47+00:00

Sanjay Poojar

Guest


Ozzie to lose Only good on doctor Ozzie wicket India to win !

2016-03-05T22:30:45+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


That doesn't sound like panic. That sounds like business as usual on the Roar.

2016-03-05T19:46:38+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You haven't read responses to yesterday's loss on The Roar? People everywhere re-selecting their sides. Calling for Watson. Dropping Khawaja. Praying for Starc.

2016-03-05T17:43:19+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


I haven't seen any panic. Where should I be looking?

2016-03-05T15:31:33+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Tye didn't even have a proper go at grade cricket until he was 24/25. Experience is what he is gathering now. With experience, he'll deliver. I can't believe the panic on the basis of South Africa going past Australia's score with 4 balls to spare. You'd think it was Trent Bridge.

2016-03-05T12:17:05+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


He's certainly an interesting pick for the Aussies. From what I can see, he's never played for Aus as an underage player and this step up must be a huge shock for him as he's got limited experience, even domestically. He may end up on the bench most games if he can't step up in the next match he plays. It's a massive ask to expect a player to perform brilliantly in a high pressure international tournament with no experience of ever having done so before. It takes nerves of steel or (having little in the way of brains) to do it from the get go. The Aussies could end up with Watson, Marsh and Faulks all playing in the same team at the expense of front-line bowlers and batsmen once the actual tournament starts. Having written that, Marsh is hardly overloaded with international experience in either one day or T20i cricket, but he's been around the teams a fair while. And of course, the headline really should be "Australia needs a fit Mitchell Starc."

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