Siddle, Khawaja and Lyon fly into World Cup contention

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Veterans Nathan Lyon, Usman Khawaja and Peter Siddle have surged into contention for the ODI World Cup in June after being shock selections in a new-look Australian one-day squad for the upcoming series against India.

Despite each having had lengthy and successful Test careers, Lyon, Khawaja and Siddle have been all but ignored for ODI selection during their careers.

Siddle’s last ODI was nine years ago, Khawaja hasn’t played a one dayer in nearly two years, and Lyon has played only two ODIs in the past two-and-a-half years.

None of that trio had appeared to be in Australia’s planning for the World Cup but suddenly they have a chance to push their case in the three-match series against India which starts next Saturday.

The inclusion of Siddle in Australia’s 14-man squad for this series was particularly left-field. Even at his peak as a Test player, from 2009 to 2013, Siddle was pigeonholed as a red ball bowler, yet now at 34 years old he is in the frame to help Australia defend the World Cup.

It is an extraordinary selection when you consider Siddle’s List A record across the past 10 years – 37 wickets at 39. Clearly Siddle has not been picked on his 50-over form, and he did not even play in the recent domestic One Day Cup.

The only explanation is that he earned his spot on the back of a very good Big Bash League last summer, when he took 11 wickets at 20, with an outstanding economy rate of 5.94 runs per over.

Siddle’s inclusion was allowed by the absence of Test quicks Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins. That trio arguably form Australia’s best ODI pace attack but in are need of rest after a taxing Test series.

Peter Siddle of the Adelaide Strikers (Photo by Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

If fit, Starc, Hazlewood and Cummins are certain to be included in Australia’s World Cup squad. That leaves another two or perhaps three spots for other quicks. Siddle will be competing with the likes of Jhye Richardson, Billy Stanlake and Jason Behrendorff, who also were named to play against India.

Richardson and Stanlake have made frequent appearances for Australia in white ball cricket over the past year, but the hugely-talented Behrendorff has been limited to just five T20Is in his career.

A natural swing bowler who can top 140kmh, the left-armer has long looked capable of flourishing in all three formats at international level, but has been held back by injuries.

There are no such health concerns for the durable Lyon, who has come of age as a Test spinner in the past year and now has a chance to finally become a regular ODI cricketer.

With Australia likely to stick stubbornly to their pace-heavy approach for the World Cup, Lyon is probably competing with leggie Adam Zampa for one spot.

Lyon was included to play India ahead of left arm finger spinner Ashton Agar. The young West Australia was economical in the five ODIs he played last year, and added to Australia’s batting depth, but did not pose a wicket-taking threat.

Lyon can consider himself unlucky never to have had a proper run in the ODI side. He played two matches in 2012, six in 2014, five in 2016, and then two in 2018.

White ball cricket is now dominated by spinners, although they tend to be wrist spinners and finger spinners who possess a bag of tricks. Lyon, by comparison, is an old-school off spinner with minimal variation who instead trades on his experience, control, sharp dip and leaping bounce.

Khawaja, meanwhile, also does not quite fit the mould of a modern white ball cricketer. The left hander has a more classical approach to batting than the sluggers now in vogue in limited overs international.

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But the reason Khawaja has been recalled is likely because of Australia’s failed attempt at fielding an ODI batting lineup laden with bashers over the past nine months.

In the absence of banned pair David Warner and Steve Smith, Australia tried to replicate England’s ultra-aggressive batting approach and picked lineups bulging with ferocious strikers.

The likes of Chris Lynn and D’Arcy Short did not prosper in ODIs and so Australia have gone for more traditional batsman in Khawaja and Peter Handscomb for the series against India.

More so than Lyon or Siddle, Khawaja has been terribly unlucky not to have played a lot more ODIs. The 32-year-old has an incredible record in domestic one day cricket, with 2,246 runs at 55, including seven tons from 42 matches.

He looks likely to open the batting with ODI captain Aaron Finch.

Australia’s best XI for ODI series against India
1. Aaron Finch ©
2. Usman Khawaja
3. Shaun Marsh
4. Peter Handscomb
5. Alex Carey
6. Marcus Stoinis
7. Glenn Maxwell
8. Jhye Richardson
9. Nathan Lyon
10. Jason Behrendorff
11. Billy Stanlake

Australian ODI squad for series vs India
Aaron Finch (c) (Victoria)
Usman Khawaja (Queensland)
Shaun Marsh (Western Australia)
Peter Handscomb (Victoria)
Glenn Maxwell (Victoria)
Marcus Stoinis (Western Australia)
Mitch Marsh (vc) (Western Australia)
Alex Carey (vc) (South Australia)
Jhye Richardson (Western Australia)
Billy Stanlake (Queensland)
Jason Behrendorff (Western Australia)
Peter Siddle (Victoria)
Nathan Lyon (New South Wales)
Adam Zampa (South Australia)

The Crowd Says:

2019-01-07T00:04:25+00:00

Ben

Roar Rookie


India will bring on spin early if he opens so it may be a good idea to have Maxwell open. Finch struggled In the last odi series and should batter down the order. My order Maxwell Khawaja handscomb S marsh Stoinis Finch Carey Bowlers

2019-01-05T22:41:36+00:00

VivGilchrist

Guest


On top of his a lack of variation, he’s also a liability in the field, and doesn’t know which end of the bat to hold. Right now I don’t see how he fits into the team.

2019-01-05T13:20:34+00:00

Rob

Guest


Australia have been horrible in ODI’s in recent years and Shaun has been a part of those results. Last time Australia was going well in the 2015 World Cup Shaun wasn’t in the team? He gives up 10-20 in the field and collects plenty of dots with the bat. He’s 35 and we need a new approach if we want to win ODI games.

2019-01-05T13:01:07+00:00

Rob

Guest


Okay The last 3 centuries Shaun has scored for Australia in the last 2 years have resulted with Australia losing? He gets a hundred a run a ball and Australia doesn’t get the win? Do you think batting with a spread field during the middle overs is difficult with a SR 81. Australia beat Scotland back in 2013 when Shaun hit 151 of 151 balls. The following game Shaun got a duck and Australia beat England. With a SR 80. he puts pressure on others players while he gets settled in. Ronan you have been banging on that 300 is a below par score in the modern game. The last time a Shaun Marsh run a ball 100 resulted in a win over India was in 2009. Australia got home by 3 runs scoring 351 and If others had batted as slowly as Shaun they would have been beaten convincingly. I was talking about the simple fact Shaun probably gives up runs in the field and running between the wickets as being the difference. Can’t recall a run out or classic catch from Shaun to change a game. Khawaja SR 82 is probably seen as slow but he’s a far better than Shaun is now IMO. If you’re happy with Shaun having the best average and Australia losing every game I’ll agree with you.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T10:40:59+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Shaun Marsh has always been a much better white ball player than red ball batsman - he averages 44 in his List A career and 39 in T20s, fantastic figures.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T10:39:12+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I think Stanlake has excellent control for a young 150kmh bowler. I think his weakness is his lack of variation - elite ODI batsman on roads can line him up confident that he won't produce a slower ball or cutter. He rarely uses off-pace balls, which is a waste because when you're as quick as he is it makes your changeups even more effective.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T10:37:20+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"I don’t doubt Siddle’s selection is due in part to his form last County season where he did really well with the Duke ball. " There's a couple of key differences between Siddle's county stint and the World Cup in England though: 1) The Dukes ball is not used in ODIs, only the Kookaburra 2) The county pitches are often moist and good for medium pace seamers, whereas the English ODI pitches have been roads for the past four years.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T10:34:54+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Head's problem in ODIs is that he needs to open and there are too many other strong opening options for the World Cup with Finch, Warner, Khawaja, even Shaun Marsh.

2019-01-05T09:57:53+00:00

VivGilchrist

Roar Rookie


He just lacks too much control to me.

2019-01-05T08:21:36+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


Yeah I was feeling pretty positive at this stage as well.

2019-01-05T07:53:46+00:00

Barnsey

Guest


My exact thoughts Ronan

2019-01-05T07:52:19+00:00

Barnsey

Guest


Rob Shaun Marsh should never have been left out of Australia’s one day side the last few years. Unlike red ball cricket, he is arguably one of our best short form batsmen. The selectors for some reason kept persisting with him in the test side, yet his short form record speaks for himself. I know we aren’t all fans of his but in the one day format, he is a must imo

2019-01-05T06:28:34+00:00

Nudge

Roar Rookie


Picking Handscomb bush was a smart move from selectors. For the World Cup we should be picking players at 3,4 and 5 that play spin very well. We aren’t going to see much pace between overs 15 and 42 at the World Cup. A middle order of 3 Smith 4 Handscomb 5 Carey 6 Maxwell Is pretty strong against spin. That’s why Lynn, Short and Head were dumped. Weakness against spin

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T05:08:23+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


India should be overwhelming favourites against an Aussie team missing half of their best XI. As for the batting lineup I picked, I think until Warner and Smith are back Australia should pick a more conservative batting lineup. When they're back and anchoring the batting Australia can afford to pick a more dynamic top 7.

2019-01-05T02:20:04+00:00

VivGilchrist

Roar Rookie


England took Lyon down last time.

2019-01-05T02:17:03+00:00

Niranjan Deodhar

Roar Pro


I guess Australia have same problems in bowling department as that of India as the core of their bowling in Tests as well as ODI's revolves around the same players. It's extremely important to keep the bowlers fresh before the long world cup. There is huge rift between the way the modern day ODI cricket is played and Tests as compared to say 12 years back when Aussies defended their world title in the Caribbean, That's the reason I guess the English have the best chance to win the world cup as they have always had two set of bowlers- one specialized for red-ball cricket & the other for shorter versions of the game since their debacle in world cup of 2015.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T01:45:23+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I'm not sure variations are as important for spinners in ODIs as they are made out to be - a lack of them doesn't guarantee failure. Lyon's job will be to keep things as tight as possible, stalling the opposition's momentum in the 15 to 40 over period. Moeen Ali does this pretty well for England, conceding only a bit over 5rpo, and Lyon is a vastly superior off spinner to him.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T01:35:03+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Great session for Australia. India haven't bowled badly it's just a terrific pitch for batting. Harris has a ton there for the taking if he stays patient.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T01:28:31+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


The gap between Stanlake's best and worst is enormous at this stage, similar to a young Starc. But he has produced several jaw-dropping spells in white ball cricket for Australia - like in his last ODI when he got England stars Root, Bairstow and Morgan in the space of 10 balls to reduce England to 4-27. There's not many fast bowlers in international cricket who can produce spells of the skill and ferocity seen in that instance, which is why the selectors are investing game time in him. Stanlake's also produced a couple of eye-bulging spells in T20Is such as 1) His 4-8 when he steamrolled the top order of Pakistan, the world's number 1 T20I side. 2) His three wickets in his first 8 balls against NZ.

AUTHOR

2019-01-05T01:19:28+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"Really like the look of your best XI side with the exception of S.Marsh." SMarsh has been Australia's best ODI batsman in the absence of Smith and Warner, and over the past six years in ODIs he's made 1,038 runs at 47. He's arguably the first batsman picked in this current Aussie side.

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