Four players to watch in Australian domestic cricket

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Australia may have a drought of international fixtures this year but domestic cricket lovers will experience a buffet over the next two months thanks to the concurrent Sheffield Shield and Marsh Cup competitions.

The cancellation of Australia’s Test tour of South Africa next month means these domestic tournaments are greatly strengthened by the presence of international stars like Steve Smith, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon.

Not only will that boost the standard of cricket, but it will also greatly increase the attention paid to these typically low-profile competitions.

As a result, this second half of the domestic season represents a brilliant platform for young cricketers or fringe international players. Here are four players to monitor over the next two months.

Bryce Street (QLD) (23 years old)
Australia’s Test opening stocks are grim after a summer in which Joe Burns and Marcus Harris flopped, David Warner laboured and Will Pucovski impressed but also continued his shocking run with injury.

Outside of that group, the obvious alternatives (aside from the tried and failed Cameron Bancroft) are Sam Whiteman and Bryce Street.

Whiteman is a former wicketkeeper currently transforming into an opener. Street, meanwhile, seems to have been born for this role.

The Queenslander’s old-school, bat-for-time style may well appeal to the Aussie selectors more than ever due to how successfully Cheteshwar Pujara has stonewalled against Australia in the recent past.

So far in his 11-match first-class career, Street has faced a whopping 117 balls per dismissal. No one in Shield cricket is harder to dislodge.

If Street can churn out a ton or two in the upcoming Shield matches, particularly against a NSW side potentially featuring the entire Australian Test attack, he could vault into Test contention.

The Aussie selectors should turn ‘yes’ at Bryce Street. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Nathan Ellis (TAS) (26 years old)
The 2023 World Cup is still two years and eight months away. Age means there are no guarantees of participation in that tournament for any of the quicks Australia took to the 2019 World Cup, aside from Pat Cummins.

All of the other Aussie pacemen that featured in that tournament will be between 32 and 36 years old when the next event rolls around.

Due to that, Australia will likely look to give opportunities to younger quicks in white ball cricket over the next two years.

Ellis shapes as one of those potential pace project players, along with the likes of Jhye Richardson, Wes Agar, Riley Meredith, Billy Stanlake and Daniel Sams.

Ellis is a well-rounded fast bowler who looks equally at ease in all three formats.

He has the stamina, patience and precision required of a first class quick, as well as the composure and variety needed to be effective in T20s.

Roll all of that together and you have the makings of a versatile 50-over bowler. Ellis has played just seven List A matches so far, with 12 wickets at 22.

But a standout effort in this summer’s Marsh One Day Cup, against international stars, could see him become a serious ODI contender.

Oliver Davies (NSW) (20 years old)
In one sense, Glenn Maxwell is Australia’s most irreplaceable ODI cricketer. Not because he’s the best, but because he’s the most unique.

There’s no batsman in the country who comes close to replicating the sprinting style of Maxwell, whose incredible ODI strike rate of 125 makes him the only current Aussie that strikes at more than 100.

This is an early call, a very early call, in fact. But 20-year-old Davies reminds me of a young Maxwell.

In his domestic one-day debut on Monday, Davies came to the crease with NSW in trouble at 4-73 against a Victorian attack featuring international cricketers James Pattinson and Jon Holland.

SCOTT PRYDE: Oliver Davies is Australia’s next star, but timing is everything

Rather than go into his shell, as most young batsmen would do in such circumstances, Davies cut loose.

The youngster drove beautifully, cut with authority, swept impressively and murdered the pull shot as he bolted to 57 from 41 balls. His daring innings changed the tone and tempo of the NSW innings, putting pressure back on to Victoria and allowing Smith to just cruise along at the other end.

Like Maxwell, Davies appeared to be batting on pure instinct. Like Maxwell, when the bowler strayed ever so slightly, he punished them.

Like Maxwell, Davies scored at a scorching rate without having to resort to rank slogging. Granted, Davies has played just one solitary List A match. But it was some performance.

Oliver Davies of the Blues. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

Kurtis Patterson (NSW) (27 years old)
Cameron Green, Travis Head, Maxwell and Patterson are Australia’s four best middle order Test options. The latter may be in the Test line-up right now if not for some tough luck with selections and injuries.

After making 30 and 114* in his solitary Test, against Sri Lanka two years ago, Patterson was unfortunate to be overlooked for the 2019 Ashes tour of England.

Then a serious quad injury restricted him to just six Shield matches since the start of last summer. Patterson averaged only 25 in those matches to fall further back in the Test pecking order behind the likes of Green, Head and Matt Wade.

I have little doubt, though, that Patterson will soon press his Test claims once more. He has an uncomplicated technique, a good temperament, a fine first-class record and, at 27 years old, should just be approaching his peak as a batsman.

The Crowd Says:

2021-02-20T12:13:56+00:00

Ravi

Roar Rookie


I don’t know much about these 4, but I looked at Street’s numbers and I’m shocked he’s in the conversation. I remember when Pujarah, Rahane and a batsman named Mithun were reeling off centuries and doubles competing for the selector’s eye. They had different qualities, but they all made big runs. As I said, I’ll defer to the greater knowledge of locals, but if Street is one of four big hopes, while averaging in the low 30’s with just 2 scores of 50+ in the last 7 matches (13 innings) it’s an interesting state of affairs.

2021-02-20T03:55:44+00:00

Pedro The Fisherman

Roar Rookie


Some others to look out for (and no doubt there are more): Tanveer Sangha? We need a decent spinner to replace Lyon and he turns it the right way. His BBL season was an excellent start. Jack Edwards as a back up allrounder (if the Green experiment fails). Jake Weatherald may be an opening option after Warner (if he could just be more consistent). Fraser-McGurk (already mentioned above) looks talented

2021-02-19T06:19:58+00:00

Harry Selassie

Roar Rookie


I'd just like to see more of that from Burns when he is in the baggy green.

2021-02-19T03:15:12+00:00

Lawrence

Roar Rookie


I'd have Maddinson over Harris any day of the week

2021-02-18T14:00:38+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Nah...he just needs to look west for a bit longer. Talented chap called Mitch Marsh. 4 talented keeper batsmen, too.

2021-02-18T13:46:37+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Last season and this season. Good form after such bad form, he was dropped by NSW. Needs a greater body of work than two good half seasons. That 77 today was just a slogfest when Victoria needed far more.

2021-02-18T12:01:52+00:00

Kim Hughes 1980

Roar Rookie


And Joe Burns is not worth a look. Well done. That guy is another S Marsh - forever Australia A standard at best

2021-02-18T12:00:57+00:00

Kim Hughes 1980

Roar Rookie


Fraser-McGurk is worth a look

2021-02-18T11:59:36+00:00

Kim Hughes 1980

Roar Rookie


Davies is the best prospect of that bunch

2021-02-18T08:40:19+00:00

Simon

Guest


Yeah Street is a good pick, could have a decent future. I actually think Khawaja and Burns should swap positions in the Bulls lineup but Joe scored a hundred today which goes some way to proving me wrong

2021-02-18T08:35:37+00:00

Simon

Guest


His numbers for the last few seasons suggests other than injury hes been the most reliable batsmen in the competition

2021-02-18T08:08:52+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Is it too obvious to ask WTF Burns has been hiding that form this summer?

2021-02-18T08:08:10+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


He’s on a hat trick next ball.

2021-02-18T07:23:10+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'm really surprised at Ronan's ranking of Street (and dismissal of Bancroft). I don't get how Street gets a game for Qld ahead of Sam Heazlett.

2021-02-18T07:14:58+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


That id still a far greater test than a tour game where evrtyone is more interested in a practice hit out

2021-02-18T07:05:25+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Not sure how the pitch was playing but Nathan Lyon taking 6 for 21 from 16 overs is pretty good going.

2021-02-18T07:04:19+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Cracking innings from Burns, if only he had been in that sort of nick at the start of the season. Ended up with 62.2% of runs scored. Charles Bannerman's test record from the very first match stands at 67.35%.

2021-02-18T07:00:33+00:00

Harry Selassie

Roar Rookie


I too immediately thought of Maddinson. He’s earned a spot with his domestic performances. of those mentioned in the article by Ronan, I think Street is the one I most look forward to representing Australia. An opener with his qualities should not be ignored by the selectors.

2021-02-18T06:50:29+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


What an epic innings. That must be close to a record for percentage of innings score. Not bad for a guy that cant bat. Now our bowlers need to pull it out for us. If Beau Webster can get it to seam around so can our bowlers. Having our top two bowlers injured is not great

2021-02-18T06:00:10+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Only Davies worth talking about of those four. If the others are in a test team it will be a very mediocre one. I think Ronans saying "the cupboard is bare" of quality. Just lots of average state cricketers. Certainly Maddinson is a highly talented batsman but probably scores to quickly for our staid selectors.

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