Who really belongs in the next Test XI?

By Mark Thorne / Roar Rookie

The Australian public has been extremely vocal on the matter of the Test selections, with common names such as Glenn Maxwell and Joe Burns, just to name a few. But do the numbers for these fan-favourites really deserve to catch the selectors’ eye?

The openers are the first piece of the puzzle for the Australian selectors. During the recent Test series against India, Australia utilised three openers: Marcus Harris, Usman Khawaja and Aaron Finch.

Of these three only one opener stood out in the series being the likes of Harris while Khawaja scored a hard-made 27 after Indian keeper Pant dropped an easy catch which would’ve seen him walk for a duck.

The Queenslander, however, averages over 100 in the opening spot and can still be considered in the opening spot should Marnus Labuschagne stay at three. Finch had nothing to back his name up this series with an average of 16.16.

Alternative names for the opening position include the Queensland duo Matthew Renshaw and Joe Burns.

However, when looking at the statistics of the current Shield season, it becomes abundantly clear that neither of these players are suitable for a spot in the nation’s best XI. Burns has an average in the opening position this shield season (with a minimum of four innings) of 37.2 with three Shield fifties in 12 innings.

His partner, Renshaw, has had a worse run this summer with an average of 19.9 in ten innings with only one minor milestone to his name.

So, who is in the running for the first Test against Sri Lanka later this month? Well the best two qualified players are the two New South Welshman Daniel Hughes and Nick Larkin.

This partnership has opened all 11 innings this season for NSW, with both averaging in the mid 50s, the highest averages by an opener this series behind the young Test player, Marcus Harris (83.5).

Hughes has the higher average of 56.89 with two centuries and two fifties, while his partner averages 54.89 with two centuries and one fifty to his name.

Marcus Harris of Australia (Photo by Michael Dodge/Getty Images)

The number three spot, normally owned by Khawaja, was also shared with Marnus Labuschagne, who hit a well made 38 before being caught out by a sharp catch taken by Rahane.

Although Marnus has a strong case, players such as Kurtis Patterson, with an average of 48, and Will Pucovski with an average of 103.67 including a 243 on his first-class debut and a 67 from his second game.

The only problem with the young Victorian is that he has only played two state-level games and is still considered too young to play at an international level. Patterson has had a lengthy FC career and this season has scored one century, three fifties and two forties making a strong case for the top order.

The middle order is the hardest place on the selector’s minds with only one of the spots locked down by Travis Head, the only Australian to score more than 200 runs against India this series.

Travis Head of Australia (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

This is where the Australian fans have the most to say about the selector’s choices for spots in the team.

The easy players to exclude are Mitchell Marsh and Peter Handscomb who unfortunately became trapped in front too easily by India, and England during last summer’s Ashes series.

Although Shaun Marsh hasn’t made runs, he does average 88.6 in the three games he’s played for Western Australia and had the fourth highest average for Australia against India.

When thinking of players to add in Australia’s middle order, the first name to mind is Glenn Maxwell, he has scored a Test ton in his previous Test matches and he has been making shield runs.

Or has he? In the two shield matches Maxwell has played, he has scored one fifty, two thirties and a duck since coming back from the T20i series against India.

Other names that appear everywhere in discussion is Marcus Stoinis and Matthew Wade. Matthew Wade has got all the numbers to lock himself a spot in the Australian team as the current shield top scorer with 571 runs at an average of 63.4 from 12 innings with five fifties, one century, two forties and three not outs batting at six for Tasmania.

Marcus Stoinis is another player who is hard to look past with a batting average of 42.57 including three handy 50’s from his seven innings when batting at 5.

But not only does Stoinis perform with the bat, he is also the desired fast-bowling allrounder that the selectors have been desperately trying to get from Mitch Marsh, and have proven useful for Australia in the short forms of the game.

With 80 overs under his belt he has taken ten wickets and bowed 21 maidens at an average of 25.2, going for 3.15 an over.

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

Alex Carey also deserves a mention, batting at seven in the two games he has played for South Australia, he has hit one not out century at an average of 75 however, with Tim Paine as the captain, it is very unlikely he will be picked in the long form.

Another player worth mentioning is the former Australian coaches’ son, Jake Lehmann, averaging 59.2 when batting at 4.

The bowling cartel of Cummins, Starc, Hazlewood and Lyon have worked for a long time and although many consider Starc and Hazlewood to of “lost their groove” recently, the bowlers have had very batsman friendly conditions to bowl on in the past few months.

The Test series in the UAE was flat and produced very little movement which was expected and in the series versus India, the pair were forced to bowl first on three of the flatTest wickets Australia has seen in its history.

The first Test against Sri Lanka will be a day-night Test at the Gabba and will require a great swing bowler.

Mitchell Starc is well known for his dangerous bowling with the new ball and his ability to reverse swing the ball which will come in handy in the night sessions.

The only bowler who should be worried about their spot is Josh Hazlewood who is more of the Glenn McGrath style bowler as apposed to the brute pace approach that Starc and Cummins use.

Mitchell Starc of Australia (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

However, if another option is required, Chadd Sayers is the pick. With plenty of swing he will definitely suit the Gabba in a day night Test match.

Based upon the above, the best choice for the Test team should be:

-Marcus Harris (18-19 Shield average of 83.5)
-Usman Khawaja (Average over 100 at opener)
-Marnus Labuschagne (Well-made 38 against India and handy leg spin)
– Travis Head (Only Australian to score more than 200 runs in the Border Gavaskar trophy)
– Matthew Wade (Averaging 63.44 with one century and five fifties in the 18-19 shield season)
– Marcus Stoinis (Pace allrounder with batting average of 42.57 and bowling average of 25.2 this Shield season)
– Tim Paine WK and captain (Great gloveman and handy lower order runs)
– Patrick Cummins (Ranked three in ICC bowler ratings and seven in allrounder ratings)
– Mitchell Starc (Great with the new ball and with reverse swing in the late overs)
– Nathan Lyon (the GOAT, fourth highest wicket taker in Australian Test history)
– Josh Hazlewood (Great accuracy at good pace)

12th Man- Daniel Hughes (averaging 56.89 in the 18-19 shield season)
13th Man- Chadd Sayers (Great swing bowling, good replacement for the Day/Night conditions)

The Crowd Says:

2019-01-09T13:23:23+00:00

KenoathCarnt

Roar Rookie


Would Like to see a Stonis,Neser combo in the team giving endless batting depth considering Neser averaged 55 this season with the bat and gives you 5 genuine bowling options. If you look at some of Neser’s wickets this season he has got some significant swing and all wickets have been agaisnt good quality top order batsmen. Even if Stoinis just averages 30 runs that is good enough considering Neser will make up extra runs and having an extra wicket taker further subtracts from the opposition total. 6.Stoinis 7.Paine 8.Neser 9.Cummins

2019-01-09T08:01:53+00:00

Karshy

Roar Rookie


Interesting side. Although I'm not sure its fair to use a very small 5 or 6 game sample size to rely on for selection. http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/records/batting/most_runs_career.html?class=4;id=2018;type=year The above link shows most first class runs for 2018 and you can clearly see top 3 for Australian batsmen are: 1. Travis Head 1460 @ 41.71 - Only 1 century 2. Usman Khawaja 1444 @ 43.75 - 6 centuries 3. Matt Renshaw 1398 @ 42.36 - 6 centuries Not sure how any case can be made for Labuschagne to play at #3?

2019-01-09T06:59:12+00:00

Rob

Guest


You have named the NSW openers as being the players leading the averages this season. They have played at the feather bed MCG, flat SCG, road WACCA, beautiful Adelaide and Munaka. They haven’t played on the seamers paradise in Hobart or the green swinging bounce of the GABBA?

2019-01-09T06:33:59+00:00

Rob

Guest


Maxwell has had 4 shield innings. His first game was against Qld on a very green pitch (GABBA)less than 2 days after he played India T20 at the SCG. He got a 2nd ball duck batting first with an absolute peach from Nesser. He then scored 35. The next match he scored 57 run out off a ricochet at the Non striker end and 34 not out. His average over the 4 innings is 42? Renshaw plays Vics on a Gabba green top, Tassie (Hobart) where 7 ducks and 11 batsmen were dismissed for less than double figures scores in the first innings of both teams? Renshaw played NSW with Test bowlers all available. Shaun Marsh played NSW (Copeland, Abbott, Conway, Lyon) on his home pitch. It all very hard to line up but sometimes where, when and who you batted against needs investigation. Mitchell Marsh batting at 4 scores 151 but was given a life dropped before reaching 50. Renshaw scores 89 opening the bat and Burns averages 129 for the same game. Simple averages do paint a picture but selectors need to watch games also. What is certain is 35yld Shaun Marsh failed to contribute once again on a good batting pitch, repeating a poor dismissal in a situation that required him to preform. He’s had so many opportunities but consistently fails to aim up when required.

AUTHOR

2019-01-09T00:41:00+00:00

Mark Thorne

Roar Rookie


AUTHOR NOTE: Hi everyone, with regard to the Joe Burns dilemma, the source I used for the stats stated that Burns had scored 372 runs at an average of 37.2. As you have pointed out this is indeed false. However, he still averages 47.2 which is still less then the two New South Welshman. Thanks for the input

AUTHOR

2019-01-09T00:37:08+00:00

Mark Thorne

Roar Rookie


I agree. I just had to point out as shocking as it is he was still the 4th best Australian batsman against India

2019-01-09T00:33:59+00:00

Ken

Guest


The author was not saying Burns had only opened 4 times, he was stipulating that as a minimum for qualification. I haven't checked his arithmetic on the average.

2019-01-09T00:31:07+00:00

Ken

Guest


Since when has the #3 spot been available for someone who made one lucky score of 38 and is charitably described as a "handy" spinner ? He is not good enough to be in the team, let alone in the premier batting spot.

2019-01-09T00:03:31+00:00

Harvey Wilson

Roar Rookie


Good team. I was amused how there was a positive light on Shaun Marsh's performance saying he had te 4th highest average for Australia against India. The bar is so low these days, he didnt even average 30. Surely Shaun Marsh cannot be selected again. It's time to move on.

2019-01-08T23:32:32+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


"Burns has an average in the opening position this shield season (with a minimum of four innings) of 37.2 with three Shield fifties in 12 innings." Mind checking this. My stats are that he's opened in all 12 innings for Qld this season for an average of 47.2.

2019-01-08T23:25:26+00:00

AJ

Roar Rookie


Likewise, Larkin and Hughes have averaged in the mid-to-high 40s this Shield season, instead of being in the 50s

2019-01-08T22:49:08+00:00

The Regulator

Roar Rookie


Matt Renshaw's county form (513 runs @ 51.30) and experience at Test level (636 @ 33.47) coupled with his age (22) should have him right at the top of the selection pile to open the batting. Should be selected for either Sri Lankan Test of CA XI tour match to stake a claim for Augusts Ashes. You're also giving Marnus Labuschagne a wide birth. His 38 was nothing special, nearly bowled first ball, especially on a flat deck and handy would not be how I would describe his wrist spin, it would be 'developing' to be nice.

2019-01-08T22:41:41+00:00

JohnB

Roar Rookie


Intrigued to see if the author now withdraws and completely re-writes this article, with that howling error in one of his basic premises having been pointed out.

2019-01-08T21:44:19+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Labuschagne should not be there unless you are earmarking him as the guy keeping Warner's spot warm. Even so, giving Burns the 2 tests would be a better investment. Similarly, Wade would only be waiting for Smith, however - that could be a good move to have him ready as backup for Ashes - batting and keeping. Maxwell should be your 12th, battling Stoinis for the #6 spot depending on the nature of the pitch.

2019-01-08T20:53:18+00:00

John

Guest


Burns has opened 12 times and averages 47 this season. He averged 55 last shield season.

2019-01-08T20:07:09+00:00

max power

Guest


easy - just seect the guys with the highest recent averages in shield cricket. dont even need selectors - such an easy job

Read more at The Roar