FLEM’S VERDICT: Green a gun, Uzzy on fire, new spinners step up - Plenty to like for Aussies' revenge mission

By The Roar / Editor

It wasn’t the greatest finish to the series with the fourth match fizzling out into a draw but the Aussies can be satisfied they’re in a strong position heading into the World Test Championship final.

A 2-1 result was a scoreline that Australia can feel pretty comfortable with considering all the injuries and personnel changes they had to put up with during the tour and the fact that a clean sweep was looking on the cards after the first two matches.

The big disappointment was day three of the second Test in Delhi. We’d got ourselves into a position where we could have won that game and who knows what happens from there but that batting collapse stopped us from being able to win back the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

There are plenty of positives to take out of the tour 

CLICK HERE for a seven-day free trial to watch cricket on KAYO

It was massive for Green to get his first Test hundred in this fourth Test in Ahmedabad and it underlines how big a loss he was in the first couple of matches when his broken finger hadn’t healed properly. 

Cameron Green of Australia celebrates after scoring his century. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

He’s now got runs in Pakistan, Sri Lanka and India, we know what he can do at home and I think he’s in for a big tour of England for the WTC final and the Ashes. 

A six-foot seven all-rounder, you might think facing spin could be a weakness but he gets that long stride down the pitch, plays within the V and has really good patience.

It’s just another exciting sign for how good this guy can be and you tend to forget he’s still only 23. 

It’ll be hard against England for Green in the runs department up against the quality of their quicks but his bowling should prosper – I wouldn’t be surprised if he does better with the ball over there than the bat.

No one has averaged over 40 with the bat and under 30 with the ball in Test history – his batting average is already up to 37.64 and he’s bowling at 34.3. I think he’s capable of hitting those benchmarks.

Khawaja missed out in the first Test but for him to bounce back and be the leading run-scorer for either side in the series.

He’s also now got runs in all types of conditions in Asia and looking back on his career he’s been underplayed, especially as an opener. 

Uzzy is averaging a tick under 70 since he’s been back in the team since the start of last year – that’s insane. 

It solidifies the top of the order and the only real question now is who opens with him in England because I’d be moving Travis Head back to No.5.

I think it’s still too early to write off David Warner but he needs to get runs in this ODI series in India to boost his confidence.

Matt Renshaw has slid back a bit after a few low scores in the middle order and Marcus Harris has suffered from being in the Test squad at home for the first half of the summer and not getting much game time. 

The big question for Warner and Harris is what’s going to be different from four years ago in England so I think they need a right-hander. 

The guy who I think the selectors should seriously consider is Cameron Bancroft as the only right-hander of that bunch.

He’s scored bulk runs in the Shield for WA this summer. He used to have a closed bat face, get bowled through the gap or LBW, little edges a lot but it looks like his bat plane is a lot straighter. 

Once James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Ollie Robinson, let alone Mark Wood and Jofra Archer, get into a groove it’s hard to get the momentum back.

With Bancroft and Renshaw both going on the Aussie A tour to New Zealand next month where they’ll be batting against a Dukes ball, that will probably decide who gets on the plane to England. 

I’d be taking Peter Handscomb as the back-up option for the middle order after he acquitted himself well in India. 

Usman Khawaja is delighted to reach his ton in Ahmedabad. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

I thought our bowling in India overall was pretty good on this tour. 

We always knew Lyon was going to deliver but Murphy and Kuhnemann were revelations and for Rahul Dravid to come out afterwards and say our spin was the best they’ve faced since Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar led England to a series victory in 2012 is massive praise. 

And Rohit Sharma said he didn’t face Shane Warne and Murali Muralitharan but for him to say Lyon’s the best spinner to come to India since them is another huge wrap.

Steve Smith said Gazza’s never bowled better and it’s hard to argue otherwise.

When Murphy wasn’t getting wickets, the Indians weren’t able to score off him. Indian batters love to run down the wicket to young  spinners and take them down but they couldn’t do that with him or Kuhnemann. 

Unfortunately for that pair, I’m not sure when they’ll be needed again in a Test because there’s not going to be many options to play two spinners let alone three. 

Matthew Kuhnemann celebrates taking the wicket of Umesh Yadav. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

It’s like being the second-best wicketkeeper – there’s no a lot of gigs to fill.

We’re not going back to the subcontinent again until early 2025 when there’s two Tests in Sri Lanka. It’s a bit of a shame that we’ve crammed tours to Pakistan, Sri Lanka and India over the past 12 months and then there’s not much else on spinning tracks in the next couple of years.

The Ashes are going to be bloody exciting but first up we’ve got to win this World Test Championship.

Playing at The Oval isn’t too bad for India because it generally turns a bit and Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja are guns anywhere. 

Their batting is still a little fragile and their lower order saved them on a few occasions but I think they’ll find it harder in England against Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood in those conditions. 

I’d be backing us to win over there and get some revenge.

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-16T20:59:47+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Yes agree Some guys like Hookes seemed to have “the aura” though. It shows that exposure to tha actual Kim - good leadership in India, sound leadership of Chappell Hughes and Marsh in 83-4 didn’t matter. You get labeled early by powerful people eg Ian. You never shake it Influential people had the same view on Clarke. And he often proved them about right. But we made him captain anyway

2023-03-16T12:35:40+00:00

Nobody likes a smarta*s

Roar Rookie


Well, that is because historically they did not bat as poorly as Carey. Carey needs to be dropped to send a message to him and other guys (like Inglis) that you cannot play like a T20 slog-fest batsman in a test match and keep getting selected. He did not bat like a test number 7 and deserves a rocket. If he is not dropped they are condoning the way he batted in India. I am starting to think that he is another of these white ball-only guys like A Agar

2023-03-16T12:32:39+00:00

Nobody likes a smarta*s

Roar Rookie


Yep, he is in the test team as a keeper who can bat at number 7. His performance as a number 7 test batsman was a disgrace and he needs a rocket - not just for him but to send a message to other guys that you cannot play like a T20 idiot in test cricket and get away with it. If historically we did not chop and change our keepers it is because historically they did not bat like Carey

2023-03-16T08:58:36+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'll see your Wildermuth and raise you a Paris. The reality is, the selection mess in India shows the folly of selecting on the basis of anything but form. Pick those who have earned it. Whether Shield or long form white ball, you'd look at Matt Short.

2023-03-16T08:57:12+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


No draw mate Vics will romp to victory :thumbup:

2023-03-16T08:54:04+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


If you play fearing injury, you may as well not play at all. You cannot manage a player's skill by hiding them.

2023-03-16T08:52:04+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Practising playing for the draw in the final. Following the Vic's template. We're not doing well at this draw stuff; used to winning. Morris, Paris and Kelly back to bowl in the final.

2023-03-16T07:18:16+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


So Carey goes after batting badly in I dis but keeping well? Harsh call, we don’t historically chop and change our keepers.

2023-03-16T07:16:55+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


If you are taking a back up bat, surely it’s Inglis, which also gives us keeper coverage. Renshaw as back up to the openers (Khawaja and Bancroft) and Inglis to cover the middle. I don’t think we need an all rounder back up, but they could do worse than your Hardie for the experience. You know who would bowl really well on English Seamers? Jack Wildermuth.

2023-03-16T07:14:26+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I think it’s more about worrying that he gets injured and deprives is of his batting. I say bring it on. Let the kid bowl, he could be the difference in England. Green vs Stokes!

2023-03-16T07:12:20+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


WA are playing outstanding cricket against the Vics :laughing:

2023-03-16T06:10:17+00:00

Bowlologist

Expert


:laughing: :laughing:

2023-03-16T04:55:41+00:00

Tana Mir

Roar Rookie


I like it, would replace Paris with Neser.

2023-03-16T04:02:52+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Warner will most likely do IPL but l can't see him doing the SS anymore

2023-03-16T04:01:21+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


On Netflix in 2024. Great and fantastique.

2023-03-16T03:44:03+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Why on earth would you select Warner??!!

2023-03-16T00:02:38+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Except Kim was never a 'conflict' man; he was just a victim of the clique.

2023-03-15T23:48:01+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


most major issues in the team or dressing room seem to involve Clarke: - Symonds - Katich _ Hayden trying to block his appointment - watson, starting in India in 2012 as Clarke suffered another massive slump - Homeworkgate not blaming him except for Watson and Homework gate, but clearly a divisive figure from early on. a great batter at his best, a mercurial touch as captain, yet never seemed to earn the respect of his senior peers he certainly sat uneasily between the two groups, being the "Pup" in Punter's early teams then a grizzler as we aged. he didn't seem to have a real peer in the team, in the same way GSC didn't really. from what I understand (Brettig etc), he and Haddin were a faction of sorts in NSW. And Katich was aligned with Hussey. who had the respect of the Haydens and Pontings. Hadidn somehow engineering Smith's appointment in 14-15 and thus locking in his longer term role (noting Smith had been back in the team for only 18 or so months at that point). so it was arguably Ricky that held it together for a few years. the handover to Katich at end of 2009 Ashes would have set us on a different and more stable path. clarke could have just made a million runs. (there are elements of Kim Hughes woven through much of this IMHO.)

2023-03-15T23:32:02+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Both.

2023-03-15T23:21:24+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


We should put a new spin on this; Clarke’s issue was never “man-management”; it was his misguided attempts at woman-management.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar