Teflon Bailey: Johnson right about selectors being too close to players but Warner won’t be denied fairytale farewell

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Mitchell Johnson was well within his rights to launch a double-barrelled attack on two former teammates David Warner and George Bailey but it’s not going to change anything. 

Warner is going to get his desired send-off from Test cricket at an SCG New Year’s Test and Bailey will keep his teflon reputation as a chief selector who deflects all criticism with a smile. 

Previous selection chiefs like Trevor Hohns and Andrew Hilditch struggled to enunciate their strategies with PR panache but were not afraid to make the tough calls. 

Bailey is much smoother in front of the media’s glare but his willingness to fulfil the main responsibility of making the right decision instead of the popular one is questionable. 

As a former national white-ball skipper, he is experienced at fielding, dodging and defusing the media’s leading questions and he was at it again on Sunday, charming his way through a video media conference with Australia’s cricketing scribes about the first Test squad. 

(Photo by David Davies/PA Images via Getty Images)

Quickly he was asked about the justification for Warner’s inclusion for the three-match assignment in the wake of middling red-ball form over the past three years and Johnson’s volatile column for The West Australian newspaper which questioned how a player with such a spotty recent record on the field and a dubious one off it should be given “a hero’s send-off”. 

Bailey momentarily lost the glint in his eye and the smile from his lips as he icily replied that”I hope he’s OK” when asked about Johnson. 

After being asked to clarify whether that meant he thought Johnson was not OK for whatever reason, he added: “I’ve got no idea.”

Despite a few more shots across his bow from reporters trying to get more out of Bailey on Johnson’s blunt force criticisms, he batted them away with customary ease. 

If he was any more of a polished media performer, he’d shine. 

The most he delved into Johnson’s verbal bumper barrage was when asked about the former quick’s assertion that Bailey was too close to the players because he’d been seen helping out at net sessions. 

“My only observation would be if someone can show me how being distant and unaware of what players are going through and what the plans are with the team and with the coaching staff – how that’s more beneficial – I’d be all ears.”

It was another example of Bailey turning an issue on its head while not directly answering the question. 

Johnson was not saying that a selector should be distant or unaware of what players are going through but saying that Bailey appeared too chummy with them when he wrote:  “I also wonder what the role of the head selector is these days. It seems to have moved to be a part of the inner sanctum, rather than standing aside from it. There are now throwdowns for the players, golfing together and celebrating wins to all hours.”

Mitchell Johnson and George Bailey celebrate after completing the 5-0 Ashes rout in 2014. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

He is spot on there. Even if Bailey doesn’t think being part of the team set-up at training or at matches makes any difference to how he selects teams, it creates the perception that he’s one of the boys. 

Previous captains have asked not to be part of the selection of teams because they found it hard to drop teammates who were also their mates. 

Johnson made reference to Bailey abstaining from the decision to force Tim Paine out two years ago and he clearly thinks history repeating with the selectors unwilling to see Warner has not been cutting the mustard for a long time. 

Bailey mentioned that Warner was only picked for the first Test against Pakistan and there were no guarantees that the 37-year-old opener or any other player for that matter would be automatic selections for all three matches. 

It would take four consecutive single-figure scores against a heavy depleted touring attack for the selectors to even consider denying Warner his planned farewell in front of family and friends at the SCG. 

Bailey even went so far as to liken Warner’s looming exit to 16 years ago when Shane Warne called it quits and the Australians cycled through several spinners trying to find a long-term replacement 

“I’d put David in that category, the way he’s opened the batting for Australia for such a long period,” Bailey said.

The only real similarities between Warner and Warne is their surname. 

George Bailey. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

One has been a very good player for a lengthy time whose average has slid south of 45 as his powers have diminished. 

The other was the greatest player to spin a ball, named one of five cricketers of the 20th century who left an indelible mark and even bigger footsteps for his successors to follow in. 

Bailey and fellow selectors Tony Dodemaide and coach Andrew McDonald have had more than their fair share of critics for their conservative and occasionally puzzling choices but winning has currency so on the back of retaining the Ashes, lifting the World Test Championship and ODI World Cup on foreign soil, they’ve been vindicated for their often unpopular decisions. 

The old “you don’t change a winning combination” approach. Well, that’s not always the case. 

One irony of the current situation with Warner is that Bailey is being patient with a player putting up modest stats when his own Test career was kyboshed rapidly even though the team didn’t lose once in his five matches of the 2013-14 Ashes campaign. 

Bailey was starting to show glimpses that he could handle the step up to Tests but was never selected again after that 5-0 whitewash spearheaded by a career-best purple patch from none other than one Mitchell Guy Johnson. 

The Crowd Says:

2023-12-08T17:46:27+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


The team is winning in spite of his form, not because of it. Anyone who has any level of cricket knowledge would realise Warner has been out of form at test level for 2-3 years.

2023-12-08T06:34:25+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


That just indicates your complete lack of cricket knowledge 13th man. He has batted really well but not to the stats "kiddies" because cricket wise they are clueless. The team keeps winning and the stats boys look like forlorn fools. They can't understand what their eyes are seeing.

2023-12-06T19:49:04+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


I’m not convinced by Bancroft either btw

2023-12-06T06:26:49+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


No I don't mean Bailey. I mean the selectors - Bailey is only one of three selectors. For all we know he wants to drop Warner and was overruled by McDonald and Dodemaide and is doing his job to defend their collective decision. I think that's very unlikely but it is possible. I understand your position and I think its a reasonable position to have. I just fall on the other side of the fence on it. Whilst not convinced by Bancroft yet, if he does get selected I'll be backing him 100% and wanting him to get a good run in the side to give him every chance of succeeding (and same goes for any other candidate). He's certainly shown plenty in the way of hard work and determination to succeed in the Shield over the past two seasons.

2023-12-06T04:54:23+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


You mean Bailey agrees? I agree it's not a no brainer,. But I would drop Warner, for the reasons we have said - his record in the last 10-15 tests, Bancroft's last 2 Shield seasons, planning for the future, letting Bancroft settle in during a home series etc.

2023-12-06T00:09:14+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


Opinion, not fact.

2023-12-05T09:22:19+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He has no credit in the bank. He has borrowed way too much.

2023-12-05T01:18:15+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I for one welcome our new Sutton overlords

2023-12-05T01:17:15+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I'd have no problem if they went for Renshaw - his form line is pretty good and he is still young.

2023-12-05T01:14:29+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


So maybe Renshaw who scored big in NZ for Australia A should be the first in line?

2023-12-05T00:10:49+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


I get what you’re saying. Where we disagree is the availability of a worthy replacement. Whilst scenario is preferable, it’s really only viable if the replacement is going to be substantially better. And as I said, if the selectors thought that one of them was going to be substantially better they would’ve already made the change.

2023-12-05T00:10:17+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I imagine Warner will make 2 good scores, out of 6, that'll justify his position. But they'll be on our "exercise mats". His selection does not advance our team's focus on settling our team at home and to springboard them to NZ & India.

2023-12-05T00:10:01+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


Will be interesting if many in the crowd follow the thoughts of Mitch Johnson and wave sandpaper at Warner’s farewell test. That depends on where it is. If he hangs on till Sinney there won't be a single piece. *And* he'll get a standing O...

2023-12-05T00:00:42+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


If you exclude someone from selection without having a replacement in mind, you've replaced them with an empty chair which needs filling. I'm not sure what your second point means, I've never suggested selection should be based on 1 or 2 games.

2023-12-04T23:57:12+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


I didn’t say there’s no one else, I said no one else has made a compelling case. Batters who score at 2.2 runs per over in Sheffield Shield cricket rarely succeed at the next level. And he has failed to make an impression in the chances he’s got in A level cricket. If Warner had been dropped and Bancroft selected I would not have a major problem with that. What I disagree with is the narrative that dropping Warner is a no brainer. Our World Cup and WTC championship winning selection panel agrees with me on that issue.

2023-12-04T23:44:04+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


“Johnson has been out of cricket for almost 8 years.” You're welcome.

2023-12-04T23:08:14+00:00

Cricnuff

Roar Rookie


My lord are you serious? You literally just confirmed my point. He's clearly saying if he gets picked and form permits then he will retire then. So yes, you are dense

2023-12-04T23:03:17+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Think! We were talking about his time in the national team. When do you think that ended. Your youth, in the form of petulance, is shaping each of your posts since you went on your 'Leave Pat alone' crusade.

2023-12-04T22:43:52+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


It's not irrational to say just because we won, our team could have been stronger. What is irrational, or more illogical, is saying this: We won, therefore that must have been our best team.

2023-12-04T22:42:23+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


I actually think a message needs to be made. If Warner was the clearly best choice, fine. But he's not. He is in a sustained run of poor form (which to me says he is actually deteriorating permanently, it's too sustained, and he's too old, for it to be a slump in form), and the proposed replacement has 2 good years of Shield cricket behind him. Yes Bancroft was average in the test team last time, but he is allowed to improve, and apparently has.

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