Carey has gone to another level

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

From the midst of a gloomy batting display by Australia last night wicketkeeper Alex Carey produced his latest sparkling knock, this time against New Zealand.

Carey arrived at the crease with Australia in disarray at 5-92 against an excellent attack on a tricky pitch and proceeded to time the ball sublimely en route to 71 from 71 balls.

There was one particular moment that brought into sharp relief just how beautifully the South Australian was batting. Having cantered to 59 from 54 balls Carey had left the TV commentators scrambling for new adjectives to sprinkle through their constant praise. Then he went to a new level.

Carey got a 142 km/h short ball from one of the world’s scariest bowlers. That same man, Lockie Ferguson, had earlier dug the ball into the pitch and bullied Australian star David Warner back to the pavilion.

It was a different story with Carey. The left-hander picked the length so early, was in position so quickly, his balance was so good and his hands were so quick that he slapped the ball in front of midwicket for four. It was a stunning shot, the likes of which you typically only expect from elite international batsmen.

This commanding stroke was particularly telling given that Carey is better known in ODIs as a strong player of spin. He had been wonderfully fluent against the New Zealand spinners, so to see him boss an intimidating quick in this fashion indicated just how rich a vein of form Carey has tapped.

Not long ago Carey was viewed by many cricket observers, including yours truly, as one of the pressure points of this Australian team. A moderately successful, slow-scoring opening batsman at the domestic level, he was being asked to swiftly transform into a freewheeling late order hitter.

Carey had next to no experience in this role, whether in 50-over or T20 cricket. The demands of these two batting positions scarcely could have been different. Yet here we are, with Carey suddenly one of the world’s most valuable late order ODI batsmen.

Before you scoff, let me back up that claim. Batting down the order at number seven, the 27-year-old has churned out 427 runs at 47 at a strike rate of 103 in ODIs. What makes that record even more impressive is that every single one of those runs has been made away from home.

Carey, prior to making his international debut 17 months ago, had never played a game of professional cricket outside of Australia. So not only has he made a remarkable transition from old-school opener to a new-school finisher, but he’s completed that task in conditions foreign to him in every sense of the word.

The ground Carey has made has been so vast that he is starring in his first World Cup. To date, he has made 244 runs at 61 in this tournament, at a scorching strike rate of 110. And he hasn’t made cheap runs either. Against the West Indies Australia were lurching at 5-79 when Carey played a mature knock of 45 to keep Australia in the match.

Then he gave India a late scare by clobbering 55* from 35 balls against the world’s best ODI attack. Versus England, on a damp, seaming track, he sprinted to 38* from 27 balls to push Australia’s total from good to very good.

Then yesterday he arrived in the middle under immense pressure, with the Kiwi attack in sync, and played like it was a practice match. Carey may not go on to become an elite ODI cricketer. But right now he is playing like one, and at the pointy end of a World Cup right now is all that matters.

It must be noted that Carey yesterday built on a platform laid by Usman Khawaja. The veteran left-hander was unlucky to be pushed down the order in this tournament after excelling as an opener in the absence of banned stars David Warner and Steve Smith. Yesterday Khawaja ended up playing almost as an opener, coming out in the fifth over and guiding Australia from peril to safety to relative prosperity.

His knock of 88 at least gave Australia something to bowl at after they were undone by the ever-impressive Kiwi attack.

(Photo by Alex Davidson/Getty Images)

As I argued in my preview of this match, New Zealand’s attack right now is arguably the best in the tournament alongside India’s. Swing bowler Trent Boult (4-51), express quick Ferguson (2-49) and seamer Colin de Grandhomme (0-29 from eight overs) all were effective yesterday. This is a bowling unit that can take New Zealand deep into this tournament.

They were backed up by some astute captaincy by skipper Kane Williamson. And if you’re wondering why my article doesn’t delve into the second innings of this match, well, a man’s gotta sleep.

The Crowd Says:

2019-07-03T05:35:20+00:00

Asthon

Roar Rookie


back to the dog house. mentioned the great bradman in the same comment as the overrate and average player at best, Maxwell, deserves the dog house.

2019-07-02T07:34:51+00:00

Peter Warrington

Guest


what does barely survive mean? you know Bradman got ducks, too? PS you could count the number of ball. in excel. or on your fingers and toes if you concentrate hard. back to the moot I go....

2019-07-02T07:31:42+00:00

Peter Warrington

Guest


did he bat at 7 behind Warner, Harris, Khawaja, Smith, Head, Finch? he averaged 40 last year in the Shield. he is striking at 100+ here, with heaps in reserve. did you know that Gilchrist averaged more in Tests than in FC cricket? some people are just made for it. in terms of not seeing test quality innings, open your eyes while they are fixing your shoulder :P the past does not predict the future. om!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2019-07-02T05:53:13+00:00

Asthon

Roar Rookie


does he average >40 and strike at > 100 in shield cricket? If he does, then there may be hope. if he doesn't, then thats just your crystal ball prediction. past predicts the future. I haven't seen any test quality innings from him (yet)

2019-07-02T05:51:22+00:00

Asthon

Roar Rookie


moot point Peter. He had countless balls to face. he could barely survive 5. Pretty average for a 'marquee' player.

2019-07-01T10:54:47+00:00

Peter Warrington

Guest


do they play 60 overs now? go fix your shoulder!

2019-07-01T10:52:05+00:00

Peter Warrington

Guest


seriously, you are comparing him to Paine, who has one FC ton in his life. Carey is 3 times the batsman. open your eyes. he also has 2 tons and 7 50s in only 29 matches. he will be even better in tests, his technique will stand up. he can average 40 and strike at 100, and that will be a weapon that makes us complete.

2019-07-01T07:21:47+00:00

Asthon

Roar Rookie


can you imaging all the maxwell fans complaining if he comes in at 6 or 7? "not enough balls" "wasted talent" We saw the talent on show against NZ. When had a chance to face 40 overs, he lasted 5 balls!!!

2019-07-01T07:20:02+00:00

Asthon

Roar Rookie


I dont think we should pick the test team based on cameo innings in ODI games. if he is good enough, he will surely show it in shield cricket. his shield cricket record is not crash hot i don't believe.

2019-07-01T07:17:12+00:00

Asthon

Roar Rookie


when carey opened last year, he was way out of his depth and struggled badly. 6 or 7 is ideal position for Carey when the initial swing etc is gone and he has to finish with not too many balls to play. This game he showed he can face >50 balls without losing his wicket which is a good sign.

2019-07-01T07:03:37+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


Scene: The Oz dressing room an hour after the NZ game. Finch: Hey Alex. You coming for a beer at The Down Under Bar? Carey: Not just yet mate. I need to check The Roar for some positive reinforcement.

2019-07-01T01:57:32+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Yeah, I certainly thought the selectors were doing the wrong thing not playing Handscomb as keeper in India and the UAE after Carey's underwhelming summer with the bat. Carey has gradually built from that point though, and he is making a really strong case for the keeper-batsman position in the team of the tournament.

2019-07-01T01:56:50+00:00

Chris Love

Roar Guru


Is it possible for Wade to play a test and we don’t hear him over a mic all test?

2019-06-30T17:46:36+00:00

Mohammed Omer

Guest


The England v India was a fixed match. India wanted to keep Pakistan out. Ms Dhoni, one of the best finishers gave up the chase when there were enough overs to do so. Suddenly, in the last over he started hitting 6 and 4s? Indian spectators started leaving the ground.

2019-06-30T10:07:00+00:00

Tony H

Roar Pro


Ronan, I like you was completely unsold on Carey for the WC, and I had Handscomb in my team as the keeper. I'm very happy, to be proven VERY wrong. Quick note on the bowling attack, I'm going to go out on a limb, and suggest that with JB and Starc taking the new ball, Cummins coming on first change and Lyon in over Zampa, Australia also has a right to be included in conversations about the best bowling attack.

2019-06-30T09:11:28+00:00

Peter Warrington

Guest


Me neither 50 off 35 innings after innings will make him one of the greats

2019-06-30T08:48:13+00:00

Simoc

Guest


I reckon Carey looks test quality at batting. His technique is copybook as are most of his shots. He looks capable of scoring middle order tons for the Australian test team. Very organized and sound temperament. If they don't want Wade, Carey looks up to the challenge.

2019-06-30T06:51:49+00:00

Lawrence

Roar Rookie


Australia winning bigly

2019-06-30T05:09:16+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


Head.

2019-06-30T04:56:34+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


He hasn’t really gotten hundreds at shield level though right?

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