Fan Rant: Who replaces Warner is the wrong question

By Nick Wasiliev / Editor

The first Test match of the Australian cricket summer is finally behind us, a moment that frankly felt like it would take forever to get to. 

The result? Well… the cricket is back, right?

Who replaces Dave Warner is the wrong question

For someone who has signposted that they’re calling quits after Sydney, the discourse around Warner’s exit has been a slog.

Despite the duck in the second innings, there is no denying Warner answered critics, most notably Mitchell Johnson, in emphatic fashion on day one, giving us a highlights package that reminded us of how good the Bull’s aggressive style can be when he is in form.

David Warner (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

For all the talk about his farewell leading up to this series and for the stain that Sandpapergate will leave on his career, there is something fantastic about watching him on fire, hitting the ground running and looking to dominate the bowlers from the get-go. 

But Warner will retire in Sydney early next month, and when he does, the question of his replacement will be all that is spoken about before the West Indies’ arrival. 

While some may question where Australian cricket sits in the national zeitgeist right now, the team itself has had nothing short of a remarkably successful year. 

Some may argue that the answer to who walks out onto the field alongside Usman Khawaja is in the team itself currently, my argument is that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

Despite current form, Marnus Labuschagne seems to fit nicely at three, as does Travis Head and Mitchell Marsh down the order. If the Aussies want an opener, it’s probably better to bring one in. 

The great thing about right now is that a variety of great openers are on the table. 

The question is whether Australia want to maintain the status quo of pairing a strong defensive player like Khawaja with a more aggressive opener in the Warner mould or whether they want to pick the best option possible, even if that means two slower starters.

Cameron Bancroft and Marcus Harris were disheartened to not chalk up a decent score for the PM’s XI, but they are aggressive batters who can, with a solid anchor in Khawaja at the other end, set the agenda early. 

Then you have Matthew Renshaw, who is a personal favourite. The bloke is patient, carefully builds an innings and fits more like a traditional test batter in the Rahul Dravid or Cheteshwar Pujara style.

What matters isn’t who replaces Warner, it’s asking the question of how we want Australia’s opening pair to play. 

How do we set the agenda at the start of a Test? Is an aggression and anchor alliance like it has been with Warner and his many partners the best blueprint?

It’s too early to tell, but lucky for us, we have many opener options on the table. Let the chat be about that, not about how much Mitch wants to bowl a bouncer at him!

Babar Azam. (Photo by Jono Searle – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

A calamitous Pakistan batting collapse, or an ominous sign for the summer?

Was anyone else really looking forward to this Test series because it was likely to be a tougher contest than many had suggested?

Pakistan have some quality batters and exciting bowlers, so my expectation was for a compelling battle rather than a thrashing to kick things off in Perth.

Was it compelling? Honestly, in parts it was. Then day four rolled around.

Yes, their preparation of a rained-out PM’s XI game wasn’t ideal, but there was a lot to suggest that the Pakistani batting would, at the very least, offer an exciting contest against Australia’s bowling.

Babar Azam and Saud Shakeel have looked fantastic for much of 2023 and Imam-ul-Haq’s encouraging 62 in the first innings suggested the side had an ability to build partnerships.

But alas, the issues we thought might rear their heads did on day four. To be honest, it kind of sucked!

While there were concerns regarding the Pakistani bowling and fielding given their lapsing standards over the past few months in multiple forms of the game (and it didn’t look like it had improved in Canberra) to see a side rolled for just 89 was more than just an erratic pitch. It felt like a side that had given up.

When a Test turns into a foregone conclusion – even if it is in your favour – it becomes a whole lot less interesting to watch.

David Warner celebrates taking a catch to dismiss Abdullah Shafique. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Many cricket lovers or players, including myself, have been on the receiving end of the moments where you accept the result is inevitable. That can be liberating, because it means you can play with no fear at all. You go out, tonk the ball around, and then suddenly, when the wind blows in your favour, you might yield a surprise come from behind win.

Nup, not in Perth. Unfortunately, such a mindset didn’t enter the Pakistani change room, and it was surprising given the personnel present. 

It begs the question: was the second innings in Perth just a moment where the pitch and good bowling got to Shan Masood and company, or is it a trend that we will see again in Melbourne?

The MCG wicket has been very hit and miss in recent years, but should it return to its former glory like last year, the Boxing Day Test can live up to the hype.

The summer of cricket is always enjoyable if Australia win, but that enjoyment is nothing compared to a compelling contest with both sides firing.

Perth wicket was a wild, compelling ride – and we need more of it

Let’s make something clear: a dangerous wicket with variable bounce isn’t OK and we don’t want players getting hurt due to poor conditions.

But – we do love contests, and a good wicket is one that shows its wear and tear over five days. 

Batting teams, in addition to overcoming the fielding side, should also have to navigate the pitch as it deteriorates, which is what we saw in Perth.

But still – what the heck was going on there?

(Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

The contrast between day one with the rest that followed has got to be one of the sharpest degradings of a wicket fans must have seen in a long time. 

Granted, it wasn’t a repeat of the WACA track that greeted Australia and the West Indies in 1997, but it did get to a point where the players were battling the wicket as much as they were each other.

As a fan though, it was compelling watching. You never want any player to get hurt, but Marnus Labuschagne was correct to point out that, despite it not being fun for the batters, it was a case of playing to the conditions. 

Runs could be made on wickets like that, as Khawaja and Mitchell Marsh proved with their 126-run stand in the second innings. Or say, Brian Lara still making a hundred on that ‘97 pitch, despite the conditions. 

Truth is, the optics around the pitch look terrible because Pakistan were scuttled for less than a hundred. 

While the wicket had something to do with it, there were also multiple poor shot selections leading to edges to the slip cordon and their terrible running between the wickets that played a role in the Pakistan capitulation.

There are few duller things in a test match than a wicket that does nothing – as anyone who saw Australia’s tour to Pakistan last year would know.

It may have radiated chaotic energy, but the Perth wicket gave us an ever evolving contest, reminiscent of the great bowling performances we saw down the road at the WACA. 

There’s plenty of work for the groundstaff to do, but it definitely made things interesting. If we could just sort out that bounce…

The Crowd Says:

2023-12-24T04:28:13+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Harris will get first crack but it doesn’t necessarily mean he will last the distance.

2023-12-23T09:08:28+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


Sometimes it’s fun to ask the wrong question repeatedly.

2023-12-22T11:49:23+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


So you didn't watch the test obviously or you are totally ignorant of all things cricket. If you had watched you would have seen Pakistan played really strongly. Their captain let them down by trying to be to aggressive which was apparently the game plan the others didn't stick to. The great Australian bowlers were able to exploit a poorly prepared test wicket. If Pakistan had batted first they may have accumulated a good total. This same Australian side was rolled for less than a 100 in India this year and wasn't the squealing about the pitch so loud here, but not from the team in India, who got a fixation on sweeping themselves out.

2023-12-22T11:40:32+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


Warner is a generational talent in the mould of Sehwag and Hayden who can bully new ball bowlers. The selectors will probably choose Renshaw, given he went to India, and Bancroft and Harris will feel aggrieved. Whoever it is , you pick the best opener available, and let them grow into the role. I think they'll perform ok but they are not potential champion cricketers like the guys plus Green currently in the team. But they'll be as good or better than Katich, Rogers who many admired.

2023-12-21T12:56:24+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I couldn't see, in the article, why replacing Warner was "the wrong question".

2023-12-21T11:37:09+00:00

Linphoma

Roar Rookie


I had lunch with my mate from Pakistan two weeks ago and he told me he was taking the family for a holiday to Pakistan. And miss the Pakistan tour here? He laughed and said, "yeah right.... come on, really?" That says it all. They unearthed some fast bowling jewels but there is a sore lack of spine. I would welcome some sort of riposte to this opinion on Boxing Day yet I fear it may be another Dave-Warner-Celebration-Tour date.

2023-12-21T04:18:19+00:00

Harvey Wilson

Roar Rookie


Pakistan were always going to pull-a-Pakistan and fall in a heap at some stage. Now that is done, hopefully they can be more competitive.

2023-12-21T00:05:21+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


Accumulating openers are fine, if they accumulate. Openers who can provide a steady platform as often as not are preferable to those who fail regularly and succeed occasionally, imo. There are five days, there isn't a need to rush early in an innings. At this stage, Renshaw is my slight favourite to move into the opening spot. Bancroft certainly also is a viable option to try. I do wonder if there are any issues between him and Smith though, which might play into selectors thinking of team cohesion. We know they love what the team perceive as a "good bloke", sometimes way above a good player. The question then becomes the number three. This is the position where the most versatile, not necessarily the best, should probably come in. he can protect the middle order if an early wicket falls, 0or capitalise if coming in after a high opening stand. Currently, is Labuschagne that player? His 2023 form has not been that good. I'm not suggesting dropping him but maybe at some stage this summer a temporary move down the order might be an idea. Head could play at #3, in form and capable of switching gears as situations demand. Labs at 6, Marsh while his (to me, highly unexpected) purple patch holds up moving to 5. That could occur with or without Warner. And, yes, tour game preparation is vital. More than one game is preferable, but boards aren't prepared to put the time and money aside. Manuka is a very not-Australia-like deck at its paciest, the rain preceding the game made sure it was slower than even its normal. At least CA put out a fairly strong PM XI, instead of the usual set of developing players who have barely played a FC game or state third elevens we often see (similar underwhelming teams are usually the case overseas as well). And, no, that is not all the fault of T20.

2023-12-20T23:38:20+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


I was going to say this. Bancroft is more in the Khawaja mould than that of Warner. But the reality is we don't really have another Warner waiting in the wings. I was hoping Caleb Jewell might pile on some runs in the first half of the Shield but he's had an underwhelming couple of months. I guess that's why people have spoken about Head moving up to open. I'm not entirely opposed to that, but I think Bancroft or Renshaw deserves first crack.

2023-12-20T22:42:54+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Cameron Bancroft is not aggressive. He is really good in t20 cricket but in red ball cricket he scores quite slowly. I am not sure this is a problem though. I do not care how quickly they score, if openers get through the first 20 overs without losing a wicket, they have done a great job. If it is Bancroft that takes Warner’s spot I have no doubt there will times when him and Khawaja score at two an over for the first 20 or 30 overs in an innings. This is fine because everyone in the Australian top six can score rapidly except Labuschagne. Look at Khawaja in the last test. He was 10 from about 50 deliveries in the second innings then on day four he went into T20 mode and scored at 11 an over for a while.

2023-12-20T22:22:48+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


1. Any Test team needs to play to its strengths and if that means opening batsmen who accumulate solid opening partnerships, that's fine. What we should not be trying to do is replicate a generational opener and expecting everything to go well. It's a bit like trying to find a like-for-like replacement for Shane Warne or the unicorn of Aussie cricket, a genuine all-rounder. 2. I've no issue at all with the batting collapse in Pakistan's second innings. A combination of a very ordinary 4th day pitch and some excellent bowling by the entire attack almost guaranteed that would happen. In case anyone's forgotten, Australia was 0 for 22 in the 2nd Test in India only 10 months ago and a bloke named Jadeja ran through the team in 12 overs taking 7 fa. The Aussie lasted one over more than Pakistans. In other words, it can easily happen to the very best teams if the circumstances are right. 3. I'm not sure I'd be listening to quotes from Marnus about that pitch. He only managed to last 18 balls in the 2nd innings and 25 in the first when the pitch was at its best. If the Aussie batsmen had been facing the Aussie attack on that wicket, IMO they'd have been complaining big time - once they got over the battering they'd receive. The Wild Thing would have been lethal on day 4.

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