Marsh's Test career will end in the swamp if Australia pitch him into opener's role: 'It's a possibility'

By Paul Suttor / Expert

The race to replace David Warner as Test opener is now getting wacky with Mitchell Marsh being thrown up as a potential option. 

On the same day that Matt Renshaw registered an unbeaten 136 for the Prime Minister’s XI, the person with the second-most important office in the land was polling the electorate about Marsh being promoted to the top of the order.

Pat Cummins said at the Fox Cricket launch on Friday that Marsh could be promoted from left field, from six in the order to opener alongside Usman Khawaja in the post-Warner era after successfully moving up to the top in white-ball cricket. 

His ability to “put the pressure back on the opening bowlers, hit them off their lengths” was worth considering, according to Cummins. 

“It’s a possibility. You’re open to anything really. I’ve seen him make that shift in white-ball cricket,” the Test skipper said.

Mitchell Marsh celebrates with Travis Head after reaching his century. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

“You never say never but he handled No.6 in the Ashes pretty impressively.”

And that last part of Cummins’ comments should be where the debate starts and ends with Marsh. 

He’s a middle-order batter in red-ball cricket, not an opener. 

It’s not like Marsh would be a walking wicket if he strolled out to the crease alongside Khawaja in the Test arena – he has a solid technique and plays the quick ball as well as most batters in the Australian set-up. 

But such a move would quickly put an end to his late-career renaissance at Test level after a four-year gap in games wearing the baggy green cap. 

Marsh’s counter-attacking century at Leeds after his recall for the third Ashes clash in July was an unexpected highlight of a Test career which has oscillated wildly since he was first given a chance nearly a decade ago.

The 118 from as many deliveries countered England’s early onslaught after Mark Wood had triggered a top-order collapse. Marsh’s striking of Wood’s thunderbolts in particular went against the grain of his teammates, who were struggling to put willow on leather.

But it should also be remembered that Marsh should have been on his way for 12 but for Joe Root spilling a straightforward chance off slip and the Western Australian followed up his ton with scores of 28, 51, 31 not out, 16 and six as the tourists just clung onto the urn.

Apart from a purple patch against a woefully outclassed England side during the home Ashes series of 2017-18 when Marsh hit two tons in the space of three matches, he has never been able to consistently deliver in the Test arena.

Well before Cameron Green was given a lengthy apprenticeship, Marsh was also handed plenty of chances by the selectors to be a middle-order strokemaker and fifth bowling option. 

It didn’t work out earlier in his career and with his bowling waning after years of injury woes, it’s unlikely that Marsh can be a genuine all-rounder for Australia now that he’s north of 32.

His only realistic chance to add a significant number to his 35 Test appearances would be batting at six, bowling short spells when necessary and definitely not at the top of the order.

Marsh’s efforts at the World Cup show that he is capable of taking over from Warner in the white-ball arena as opener.

Mitch Marsh. (Photo by Matthew Lewis-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

He and Travis Head would be a lighting left-right combination in both limited overs formats – similar to Mark Waugh and Adam Gilchrist a generation ago, two similar players who worked well when the ball was new in white-ball cricket but were far more effective in the middle order in Tests.

Cummins seemed less enthusiastic about Marnus Labuschagne, another name that has been floated to replace Warner, vacating the No.3 spot. 

Which should mean Warner’s replacement will come from a specialist opener in Renshaw or Cameron Bancroft, perhaps Marcus Harris.

With Green on the outer after appearing to spread himself too thin across the three versions and the IPL, Marsh has a golden opportunity to cement the No.6 spot this summer with three Tests against Pakistan, starting next week on his home turf in Perth, and two more against the Windies.

If recent history is any guide, he is likely to be coming in to face a tiring attack with plenty of runs already on the board.

The Crowd Says:

2023-12-11T21:37:14+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


we've known this for two years ..he should have gone after uk tour for ashes 2019 where he averaged 8 for the tour which is the worst average for an opener in test cricket series in all countries on record. Pathetic that he was selected after that really

2023-12-11T21:34:49+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


James B bottom line as it stands os marsh bats very well in England which I was advocating on 2019 . Unproven on Aussie pitches average wise but he's on decent form

2023-12-11T02:12:44+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: I'm still going with the Pope of 1494

2023-12-11T02:04:17+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


You're wrong Rowdy. We are on a globe - WA is extreme right, the rest of Australia is extreme left. Please refer to me as Adolph from now on.

2023-12-10T22:12:59+00:00

Andrew

Roar Rookie


Nah. Hazlewood. Much funnier.

2023-12-10T13:05:20+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


All 3 are fine by me.

2023-12-10T09:03:41+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I’m going Lyon to open

2023-12-10T08:59:50+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Bancroft hit three fours all through slips? Honestly none of them filled me with confidence

2023-12-10T04:23:27+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Or one of the back to back Sheffield shield winning Western Australian boys?

2023-12-10T03:29:51+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


I think we can see from your ridiculous comments that cricket and you are miles apart. You look at stats and decide you know. I bet you've never even played club cricket. You're a country mile from reality :) but amusing to demonstrate the riff raff pretenders.

2023-12-10T03:24:57+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


Bit limited aren't you Sports Tragic. 27 is 27 more runs than you have ever scored anywhere by the sound of you. And for a test cricket all-rounder it aint so bad. In NZ / England it would guarantee him a test game.

2023-12-10T01:52:13+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Boo-urns, stop cherry-picking and look his last three innings.

2023-12-10T01:16:22+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Would be the biggest kick in the teeth to Bancroft and Renshaw if Marsh was to open ahead of them. I love Mitch the white ball player, and I think he should captain the t20 side, but I don’t think he should be in the test side, let alone being thrown up as an opening option ahead of guys that have dominated in Sheffield shield over the last couple of seasons.

2023-12-10T00:34:00+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


:silly:

2023-12-10T00:22:39+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


The Neser of three evils.

2023-12-10T00:07:47+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Whoa … On what did l base my wit? I based it on what you were saying. Lighten up

2023-12-09T23:31:16+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


You were making a comment that you thought was witty … You obviously didn’t understand that I was saying that most people in WA were born elsewhere & transplanted into that state . So if WA was under threat from the east , after breaking away . They’d claim Australian citizenship & run back East, where they originally came from. I must remember to explain everything in a longer form , for those that have difficulty in understanding what I think will be quite easily understood . Without a long explanation. :thumbup:

2023-12-09T23:21:12+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I was looking at a map of Australia and it appears WA is on the Left. Am I wrong? Geographically speaking

2023-12-09T23:03:01+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


If only he was a flat track bully, as a bowler.

2023-12-09T22:52:24+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Yes, but the majority of the people are transplanted from elsewhere. I can see that you didn’t understand. :thumbup:

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