Is Cameron Green doing enough to keep his spot in the Australian Test side?

By Alex Hudson / Roar Guru

Cameron Green is a talent. Over 1000 Test runs, an IPL century, and some of the safest hands in the gully within world cricket, all before the age of 25, doesn’t happen by accident.

However, getting hit for a hat-trick of sixes from Ben Stokes, following a duck in the first innings, must raise questions within the selectors’ minds.

His first tour of England, thus far, has been relatively quiet from the 1.98m all-rounder, having scored just 114 runs at an average of 19.00, and picked up five wickets at 45.60. With a plethora of in-form Australian all-rounders waiting in the wings within the squad, County cricket or even back home, it’s time for change before the third Test and for the remainder of the series.

Mitch Marsh (in the Ashes squad)

Marsh, at time of writing, appears to be the frontrunner as Green’s potential replacement, with his inclusion in the squad coming off a Player of the Series award in Australia’s most recent ODI series against India back in March. Due to his Australia duties in the white-ball formats, Marsh was limited to only one Sheffield Shield innings last season, in which he scored an unbeaten 108 from 111.

Along with his recent success with the bat, Marsh has been at his best with the ball in English conditions in the past, with 15 wickets in his four away Ashes Tests, including career-best 5/46 in his last Test to date, in the fifth match of the 2019 series.

Mitchell Marsh of Australia looks on during an Australia One Day International squad training session at MA Chidambaram Stadium, on March 21, 2023 in Chennai, India. (Photo by Pankaj Nangia/Getty Images)

Selector George Bailey commented on Marsh’s selection in the squad before the tour began, stating that he’s, “not just Green’s understudy.” Now it’s time to see if the selection committee will stand by their word.

Sean Abbott (not in squad)

The New South Welshman has lit up County cricket this season, having been influential in Surrey’s first-class campaign that currently sees them at the top of the Division 1 table. Abbott’s seven red-ball matches for the southern side has seen him transition from a bowler who can bat into a fully-fledged, dominant all-rounder.

With 385 runs at 55, on top of his 27 wickets, the fast bowler has adapted to the English conditions as well as any. The New South Wales and Sydney Sixers veteran is one of Australia’s most experienced and in-form players, and for Bailey’s selection team to ignore his performances any further would be an instrumental loss for Australian cricket.

Michael Neser (in the Ashes squad)

Neser, 33, has spent the better most of the last four years in and around the Test squad, resulting in only two Tests played and a further dozen as 12th man. This winter, like that of Abbott, Neser has found success in all facets of his game, with County side Glamorgan.

Neser’s 7/32 against Bairstow’s Yorkshire, including the side’s 11th County hat-trick in history, and 123 against Ollie Robinson’s Sussex are just two examples of his positive Glamorgan campaign thus far which has seen 311 runs and 19 wickets in his five games.

The Queensland bowling all-rounder has long demonstrated success in English conditions and, the simple matter is, Green (as talented as he may be) hasn’t.

Aaron Hardie (not in squad)

Despite being the only all-rounder on this list without experience in international cricket, Aaron Hardie, 24, has established himself as a big game player continually over the last few years. Following back-to-back successful Sheffield Shield final performances, including 174 not out in 2022, and 45 from 86 and four wickets in 2023, Hardie earned a spot in Australia A’s touring squad of New Zealand in April.

In his three innings for the series, Hardie’s 169 runs saw him be Australia’s third-highest run-scorer for the tour, only behind batters Tim Ward and Matthew Renshaw.

Furthermore, in 2022, Hardie represented Surrey in a lone County Championship fixture, which saw the Western Australian score 46 and 40 not out respectively, along with a pair of wickets.

The young Western Australian, who dismissed Virat Kohli in a tour match at 19, has solidified himself as one of Australia’s most in-form batting all-rounders in red-ball cricket and performs consistently on the big stage, and what bigger stage is there than an Ashes Test with a series in the balance?

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The Crowd Says:

2023-07-05T05:55:31+00:00

Harvey Wilson

Roar Rookie


I don't rate Green much at all at test level, his record is only average at the moment. If Marsh can have 32 tests, and Warner 3 years then Green deserves plenty of time. I think his age works to his advantage and he will be given plenty of chances.

2023-07-05T03:55:16+00:00

Michael Coote

Roar Rookie


The Squad has been updated in the last couple of days for the last 3 days and Handscomb has not been added, with 2 reserve batsman already in the squad, Renshaw and Harris, as well as Marsh, Inglis and Pierson in the squad, I would very much doubt they are going to add any more batsman short of a severe injury crisis. PS: Personally I would have had Handscomb in the original squad instead of Renshaw.

2023-07-05T03:16:28+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


"Handscomb is not in the squad." This does not really matter. Squads change in the middle of series all the time.

2023-07-05T02:58:03+00:00

Michael Coote

Roar Rookie


Handscomb is not in the squad.

2023-07-05T00:33:24+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Green is a phenomenal cricketer for a 24-year-old. However, his batting average over the last 12 months is 27.7. He has taken 11 wickets in the same period. If it was a home series against any opposition but India I would keep him in the team but in an away series we just cannot have guys that are not able to contribute. I would like to see Neser or a specialist batsman like Handscomb, Harris, or Renshaw.

2023-07-04T23:14:45+00:00

Michael Coote

Roar Rookie


We are up 2-0, we have a forced change to make due to injury (Lyon), possible change due to rotation (Hazlewood) so why does everyone want to make unnecessary changes? Marsh has scored 1260 runs @25 in 32 tests, Green 1056@34 in 23 tests. Marsh is a test match failure, got no idea why he is even in the squad, he is even more of a MOAT (Most Overrated All Time) than Crawley. I would play Neser before Marsh, at least he is test class in one discipline.

2023-07-04T12:50:02+00:00

Tom


He made a 100 3 tests ago, jeeze

2023-07-04T12:03:04+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


I guess we'll see soon enough.

2023-07-04T10:25:22+00:00

Hunters

Roar Rookie


Mitch Marsh does not mean guaranteed runs. But he has the talent and has been in the fire more than Green so would probably handle the heat as well as anyone. Abbott is good and sometimes great. Neser has been sometimes very good. Don't know enough about his batting to know how well he would step up to Ashes intensity. Hardie sounds like a future potential who needs some time at a higher level.

2023-07-04T10:21:46+00:00

Hunters

Roar Rookie


Green's bowling to Stokes was particularly poor. It was so poor that it made me wonder if he was being tasked with bowling to get Stokes hitting in order to bring on a mistake. Either way, it was either poor bowling or poor captaincy. Stokes has proven before to have the talent and the inclination to take on bowlers very successfully in conditions such as those on the 5th day. He was seeing them like beachballs and shouldn't have been given so many freebies. Therefore, if it was Green, he's earned a rest for being a naughty boy. If he was following instructions, I hope they've learned their lesson. That was easier and closer than it ever should have been.

2023-07-04T10:04:44+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Don't forget to look at the first innings as well, where both Starc & Hazlewood went at better than 5 an over and they had the advantage of bowling with a newish ball, at least some of the time. Green only gets the ball when it's well past it's use by date, on pitches that guys way more experienced than him struggled on. I think if anyone suggested to Cummins or McDonald they should seriously consider dropping Green right now, they'd likely get a polite smile and a simple answer, "no way".

2023-07-04T06:01:02+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


He's being singled out because he got absolutely paddled and no longer sets fear in the opposition batsmen. We need to be at our bowling best moving forward with our top bowler and spinner now out of the Ashes, and that means we don't have the luxury of carrying any of the bowlers. I think Hazelwood is under the microscope too... saved that he did actually take the wickets that mattered.

2023-07-04T01:27:23+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I'm not sure why Green's been singled out when the bloke who should be in the firing line is Marnus. He's made 6 more runs as a specialist bat, averages a healthy 22.5 and has faced way less deliveries. He's barely contributed through catches in the field either, let alone taken any wickets. Of course he won't be dropped and neither should Green. If it ain't broke.........

AUTHOR

2023-07-04T00:57:09+00:00

Alex Hudson

Roar Guru


Highlights of Hardie's recent Australia A century: https://www.cricket.com.au/video/new-zealand-australia-a-second-first-class-four-day-match-lincoln-video-highlights-hardie-jewell/2023-04-08

2023-07-03T23:55:53+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


No. Needs to be dropped

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