Labuschagne shows all-round potential against Pakistan

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Marnus Labuschagne may not be ready for Test cricket just yet, as his first-class batting record suggests, but he has great potential as a batting all-rounder thanks to his accurate leg spin.

Labuschagne has now taken wickets in each of Pakistan’s three innings this series. He was pivotal yesterday, snaring 3-45 as the hosts were bowled out for 282 on day one of the second Test, in Abu Dhabi.

Despite barely having bowled in first-class cricket – he’d taken only 12 wickets from 36 matches – Labuschagne has threatened in each of his spells in the UAE.

What’s more, three of his wickets have been top-six batsmen, yesterday he got wicketkeeper-batsman Sarfraz Ahmed on 94, and the other was dangerous bowling all-rounder Bilal Asif.

Incredibly, he has taken five wickets at 16 in this series, compared to specialist spinner Jon Holland’s haul of four at 63.

What is most encouraging about Labuschagne is not his results with the ball but how he has achieved them. Each of his five wickets have come from genuinely good deliveries, rather than fortuitous dismissals from loose offerings, as can often be the case with wrist spinners.

Marnus Labuschagne of Australia (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

Unusually for a part-time wrist spinner, Labuschagne bowls few bad balls. Most occasional leggies are capable of sending down wicket-taking deliveries but mix them up with a generous helping of boundary balls.

Steve Smith is a perfect example. In any given over, the former Australian captain produces several swerving, dipping deliveries of which a specialist leg-spinner would be proud.

The problem, and the reason Smith can only be used sparingly, is that each of his overs typically also includes at least one or two half-trackers or full tosses.

Smith bleeds runs so badly – his Test economy rate is 4.18 runs per over – that he swiftly releases any pressure built up by the frontline bowlers. As such, he can only be used as a last resort, when a skipper is desperate for a wicket.

Not so Labuschagne. The 24-year-old can be trusted to bowl at crucial junctures, just as he did yesterday when debutant Fakhar Zaman (94) and captain Sarfraz (94) were threatening to take the game away with a 147-run stand.

In his second over, Labuschagne had a huge LBW shout against Fakhar turned down, only to trap him in front three balls later. He then beat the edges of Sarfraz and Bilal several times each before eventually earning a catch for wicketkeeper Tim Paine when he defeated Bilal in the flight.

Aussie wicketkeeper Tim Paine (AAP Image/Dave Hunt)

Then, in the seventh over of a fantastic spell, Labuschagne got a leg break to dip sharply on Sarfraz, who looked to loft it down the ground but could not get to the pitch of the ball and instead skied it to cover. It was a phenomenal spell from a cricketer who was picked as a specialist batsman.

Labuschagne is fortunate to be in the Test team considering his modest first-class record – 2199 runs at 34, with only four tons.

He is probably still a year or two away from being ready to play as a frontline Test batsman. But you can now be sure he will get a lot more overs when he returns to the Sheffield Shield.

With the experience of bowling more regularly, he could become the kind of player Australia have long sought – a genuine top-six batsman who also challenges the opposition with the ball. While Labuschagne has a long way to go, he has immense potential with the ball.

Australia’s batsmen will be wary of the amount of turn gained yesterday by Labuschagne and Nathan Lyon, who produced a remarkable spell in the first session, snaring 4-0.

Pakistan landed a dizzying blow before stumps when first-Test hero Usman Khawaja was caught down the leg side from the bowling of pace star Mohammad Abbas. The gun seamer then grabbed a second, with nightwatchman Peter Siddle out LBW, leaving Australia 2-20 at stumps.

Regardless of those late wickets, it was a good day for Australia after they suffered the major disadvantage of losing the toss and being asked to bat last on a pitch which was turning from the first session.

With Khawaja gone, it will be up to the likes of the Marsh brothers to step up with the bat if Australia are to gain a first innings lead. Without a lead of some sort, Australia will be in a vulnerable position on a surface which looks likely to assist the spinners greatly as the Test wears on.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-19T03:56:33+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


It took Waugh three years to get his first ton but Waugh did get plus fifty scores. Same as Bob Simpson, 30 tests to get his first hundred but plenty of plus fifties before that.

2018-10-17T14:53:32+00:00

Ben

Guest


Yeah I know right! Averages are largely pointless until around the 15-20 game mark when it has settled down and doesn't spike as rapidly when first starting. The whole knee-jerk reaction decision making is why we are in this situation in test cricket at the moment. Hyping players up after half a season in shield cricket is ridiculous, let these guys settle in for another 12 months and if they are still piling on the runs, give them an ODI or Test cap.

2018-10-17T14:47:37+00:00

Ben

Guest


David 'low IQ' Warner is Australia's second best batsman by a longshot. Personally I don't care about your personality, as long you don't totally upset the team you should be in on merit of your runs, which Warner has plenty of.

AUTHOR

2018-10-17T11:58:26+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Pucovski has a serious problem with concussions - he's had 4-5 over the past two years while batting - so until he proves that he's over that there's no way I'd expose him to international cricket.

2018-10-17T10:11:54+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Nevertheless a great innings by the 20yo Pucovski. If he can back that innings up with another couple of tons I'de play him against India. There are no top line batsman or potential world class batters in the present team apart from Khawaja. Finch is proving himself well as an opener. We desperately need another consistent run scorer in this team.

AUTHOR

2018-10-17T08:59:30+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


NCN is in the UAE with Australia's T20I squad and the other three are being managed - Behrendorff won't play Shield this year, Richardson will probably be back for round 2 of the Shield and Paris is being treated very carefully by the WA medical staff apparently because of his fragility.

AUTHOR

2018-10-17T08:57:16+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


No one outside of the selection panel thinks Mitch Marsh is a number four batsman.

2018-10-17T06:48:33+00:00

Simoc

Guest


On another note WA has all these supposedly great fast bowlers Behrendorff, Tye, Coulter Nile, Paris and come Shield time they put out the B grade. Are they all injured or resting for T20? Certainly they're no match at home for the Victorian team at present. One can say Labuscagne is promising, that's all. His dropped catch was costly. I reckon leggies going at 4 an over is fine if they're ripping it and getting turn and bounce.

2018-10-17T05:10:23+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Heazlett looks a lot worse as he got clean bowled. QLD in trouble

2018-10-17T05:01:46+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Imagine if that was the deck they served up to a Gabba test.

2018-10-17T04:55:57+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


That technique still bringing him a little unstuck...I rate Burns and feel he was shafted unceremoniously; but I feel like that was a replay of half his International dismissals bowled through the gate

2018-10-17T04:55:29+00:00

warrrne

Roar Rookie


one innings. give it a rest

2018-10-17T04:54:55+00:00

warrrne

Roar Rookie


you're off your head if you are talking averages after 5 or 6 games

2018-10-17T04:51:54+00:00

warrrne

Roar Rookie


Off Holland, no less

2018-10-17T04:50:34+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


I do not think he is a specialist. I think he is in the infield a lot as well.

2018-10-17T04:32:32+00:00

Matt H

Roar Guru


In other news, Joe Burns starts his Shield campaign off with a duck, bowled by Jackson Bird.

2018-10-17T03:59:02+00:00

Rob

Guest


Not a Test batsmen yet “as his First-class batting record suggests “. What is Mitch Marsh’s average? Batting number 4 in the Test team. He’s a better bat, bowler and fielder than Mitch already IMO.

2018-10-17T03:57:20+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


The trouble is, to be a good leggie you really need to get a lot of overs under your belt. As Ronan notes ML hasn’t bold much to date, fewer than 200 first class overs in 30-odd matches. But if he devotes as much time as necessary to bowling, will he make the necessary step up as a batsman? I suppose if he can bowl this well as a part timer, he will still be valuable as an occasional fifth bowler, especially in the third and fourth innings. Enough to make Mitch Marsh either qualify as a batsman or not at all.

2018-10-17T03:51:32+00:00

Matt H

Roar Guru


Meanwhile, 20-year old Victorian young gun Will Pucovski hits his second Shield century today, taking his career average above 40. He is currently batting with Matthew Short, who has nudged his average over 50 after nine Shield games. Obviously you have to discount this a little, because last year's MCG was a road, but today they are doing it in Perth

2018-10-17T02:22:28+00:00

Tanmoy Kar

Guest


What went wrong with Nathan Lyon, after taking 4 wickets in a shot he could not take any wicket?

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