Struggling Jonny Bairstow more valuable to England as a batsman than a keeper

By Henry Arkwright / Roar Rookie

It is time for Jonny Bairstow to admit to both himself and his England teammates that he is more valuable to England as a batsman than as a keeper.

Statistics show that in Test cricket he struggles to do both together. As far as keeping is concerned, England have arguably the best gloveman in the world waiting in the wings in Ben Foakes, who also happens to have a Test batting average of 40 – five more runs an innings than Bairstow (although admittedly Foakes’s is a relatively small sample size).

In one-day cricket, Jos Buttler has long been England’s number one keeper, and it has allowed Bairstow to flourish at the top of the order. The early momentum his batting provides in ODIs is one of the main reasons England are world champions.

It is surely now time for Bairstow to realise that his true value to England in Test cricket is as a counter-punching number five or six batsman – someone who has the talent to average 40 in Test cricket. At his best, he is arguably England’s second-best batsman after Joe Root, and is a crackerjack fielder to boot.

He’d be a welcome addition to England’s shaky slip cordon, and he’s the best ‘sweeper’ fielder on the boundary in world cricket.

One thing about Bairstow though is that he is stubborn – he has a burning desire to prove doubters wrong, and his best performances often come after a journalist or ex-player has written him off. Tell him he shouldn’t be keeping in Tests for England, and you’ll likely be met with a curt reply.

However, there now seems no escaping the fact that his technique with both bat and gloves has deteriorated in Test cricket. He averages a little over 20 with the bat in 2019, which simply isn’t good enough for a player of his ability. He has also dropped some fairly straightforward chances behind the stumps so far in this Ashes series.

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It could be partly down to a World Cup hangover – the high of winning the World Cup, especially winning it in the circumstances of that final, must take a while to come down from. But it could also be due to him having to work on the dual skills of batting and keeping, rather than being able to put all his time and energy into working on his batting.

Either way, it’s not working for him.

The most logical move would be to bring Foakes in at seven in place of Buttler – another player who has found it hard to convert his one-day prowess into Test match consistency, with Bairstow playing at six as a specialist batsman.

Jonny might not like this, but sometimes even a burning desire to prove critics wrong has to be put aside in favour of what is best for the team, and in time Bairstow will accept this and flourish.

The Crowd Says:

2019-08-30T09:44:15+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


From what I’ve read about, the best in the UK perhaps with Ben Brown not far behind. The interesting thing being that Johnny is probably a long way back in that queue, and may not even be the best keeper in this XI currently.

2019-08-30T07:23:39+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


He’s got to give up the gloves and bat at 3 or 4. Butler isn’t needed. Bring Foakes in.

2019-08-30T02:54:02+00:00

Savvas Jonis

Roar Rookie


Beat me to it! It would match Lillee, Bowled Dilley, Caught Willey!

2019-08-29T19:29:23+00:00

Targa

Roar Rookie


Actually he might make the Pakistani team too.

2019-08-29T19:07:08+00:00

Targa

Roar Rookie


It is extremely arguable that Ben Foakes is close to being the best keeper in the world. It is Watling then daylight, although Foakes seems a fine player. Bairstow is a world-class ODI batsman, but will he make it in tests? Apart from Ireland, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, and perhaps the Windies would he make any test side as a specialist batsman?

2019-08-29T10:21:34+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


Bairstow at 5/6 with Foakes at 7 seems ideal, although Jonny mightn't like it! The freedom to concentrate on his batting can't surely hurt..but perhaps I'm biased for want of a scorecard showing; Stokes Foakes Woakes

2019-08-29T10:12:27+00:00

Simon

Guest


England have an excellent middle order in 4. Root 5. Stokes 6. Bairstow 7. Foakes Hopefully they don't realise this series though and continue with the macho move of having Root get out early

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