Test Mortem: Smith to opener an act of convenience, team shows signs of fatigue, Pakistan selectors' costly blunder

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Steve Smith becoming the surprise frontrunner to replace David Warner as opener so the selectors can shoehorn Cameron Green into the side looks like an act of convenience rather than the right outcome. 

Australia are now looking ahead to the “challenge” of taking on a weakened West Indies side in a two-match schedule filler after Warner roared into retirement with a rousing half-century as they sealed a clean sweep of Pakistan at the SCG. 

And after all the talk from the likes of coach Andrew McDonald about the various options to replace Warner as Usman Khawaja’s opening partner, Smith now looks like he will get the gig mainly because none of the other incumbents want the role. 

It appears when the call for volunteers to partner Khawaja was made, the other middle-order batters all took a step backwards, leaving Smith as the only option. 

Is that the way a team should make such a crucial decision? Canvass the candidates and wait for someone to say yes. Marnus Labuschagne, Mitchell Marsh and Travis Head made it clear they were happy with their current spots. 

If Smith had done the same and said he was unwilling to take on the new ball, heaven forbid the selectors may have been forced into a situation where they would have to make a tough decision. 

You know, the kind of tough call that they’re paid to make. 

As it stands, Green will come back into the team at four, where he has fired consistently for Western Australia. His reward for a form slump at international level has been to get a recall two spots higher in the order.

He has never batted higher than six at Test level while Smith has opened precisely zero times in his 187 trips to the crease over a 14-year career. 

The two Tests against an outclassed Caribbean cohort will give Australia next to no real context about whether Smith at opener of Green at four will be a success against teams that are able to field a competitive line-up.

Australia have a two-match tour of New Zealand next month which will be no walk in the park, particularly when two of your top four are in positions where they have little Test experience. 

Steve Smith. (Photo by Alex Davidson-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

The conditions in the Shaky Isles will test out batting techniques – there will be seam off the pitch and swing in the late summer/early autumn air. 

And that’s their last Test assignment before the five-match home blockbuster against India next summer when Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami and co will look to make it three successful tours to Australia on the trot by giving the top order another working over.

Smith has become a mere mortal in recent years when it comes to stepping across the stumps and working the ball through the leg side, bringing the LBW dismissal more and more into the equation no matter how upset he looks each time when an umpire or DRS has a differing opinion to his. 

That opinion 99.9% of the time is “no way was that out, the ball was clearly missing the stumps, I’m taking my bat and going home”. 

Even when he fell for the obvious three catchers at cover ploy in Sydney, it was the pitch’s fault as he looked down at the surface with disgust rather than castigating himself for a poor shot.

Test skipper Pat Cummins said on Saturday that Smith’s surprise switch was still not set in stone.

“I’m pretty happy with (Smith)’s output at No.4,” Cummins said. “Obviously Marnus, Smudge (Smith), Trav and Marsh have been pretty impressive at No.3, No.4, No.5 and No.6. 

“So first instinct isn’t probably to disrupt that.” 

Poor old Matt Renshaw, Cameron Bancroft and Marcus Harris meanwhile sit by the phone – the specialist openers waiting for a call or the modern-day equivalent of a DM from the selectors via WhatsApp.

There is little to no history of middle-order specialists suddenly making a success of opening at such a late stage of their career. 

Perhaps it’s the kind of challenge Smith craves to fire up his competitive juices for the final stretch of his playing days as he has looked a little stale over the past 12 months. 

There’s no chance of him regaining the captaincy on a full-time basis and apart from playing his part in the T20 World Cup campaign in June, there is nothing left to prove in the white-ball arena. 

But what if it doesn’t work? Will the selectors then reinstate him to four and Green gets punted again or will Smith decide the time has come to call it a day to give his decade-younger protege clear air for the future?

Judging by their ongoing reluctance to tell Warner his time was up for two years when he was clearly past his use-by date, the selectors won’t be telling Smith to jump before he is pushed. 

Team showing signs of fatigue

The Australian brains trust shouldn’t need to check their sports science results to see this team is looking fatigued. 

After narrowly getting past Pakistan at the MCG, they had lengthy periods in Sydney where they were well off the pace and if not for a game-changing Josh Hazlewood spell on day three, the tourists could very well have broken their Down Under drought which stretches way back to 1995 at the same venue. 

Apart from getting the openers for a duck, Hazlewood and new-ball partner Mitchell Starc seemed to lack zip at the SCG in the first innings. 

They each struck early in the second innings before Hazlewood produced a three-wicket maiden as part of his 4-16 haul. 

Travis Head, another of the three-format stars, had a down series with just 81 runs from five bats – keeping him in India after the World Cup for three meaningless T20 hit and giggle missions was far from ideal preparation for the home Test summer. 

Smith and Marnus Labuschagne also don’t seem to have the endless powers of concentration that they displayed at their peak a couple of years ago while Usman Khawaja, who plays just one format at international level, was not able to get out of second gear.

Josh Hazlewood celebrates the wicket of Pakistan captain Shan Masood. (Photo by Pete Dovgan/Speed Media/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Khawaja, who was controversially rested from a couple of Sheffield Shield matches to be fresh for the Tests, missed an easy catch in the slips cordon which in isolation is no big deal but when players are 37 and the reflexes start slowing down, the drop-off in form can be quick at this level. 

After leading all scorers in Tests last year there is not even a scintilla of doubt over Khawaja’s position but the Aussies need him to remain their rock at the top of the order with an opening newbie in Smith likely to be by his side for the foreseeable future.

Pakistan selectors deserve an uppercut

Resting pace spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi from the Third Test goes down as one of the dopiest and most cowardly decisions from a touring team in a long time. 

Pakistan have a five-match T20 series in New Zealand coming up and the selectors wanted to keep him fresh for that campaign. 

Apart from the players and perhaps their immediate family members, exactly who will remember what happens in that series within a few weeks of its completion? 

You can see why Waqar Younis and Wasim Akram were so fired up in their respective commentary booths over the boneheaded move to rest Shaheen. 

It’s fair to say that if Shaheen was steaming in at the SCG instead of Hasan Ali (0-68 for the match) or Mir Hamza (1-62) that Pakistan would have been much more likely to rack up a bigger first-innings lead than 14 and could have been a far greater chance of bowling them out on the deteriorating day-four wicket. 

After going close to upsetting the Australians in Melbourne, this was their chance to spring an upset in conditions most reminiscent of what they’re used to on home soil.

Carey better with no sweater 

Alex Carey gets no sympathy for getting bowled by a ball which clipped the leg bail because its trajectory was dragged down slightly after brushing his jumper. 

For those who missed it, Carey was beaten by a straight ball from Sajid Khan which just hit the top of his castle following the slightest of touches from his sleeveless sweater.

If you need a garment for warmth while playing professional sport, you are not exerting enough energy. 

Woollen sweaters should be the domain only for golf or lawn bowls. 

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-10T02:20:06+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Warner shouldn't retire if the team needs him. A player should need to ask permission to retire and if there's no replacement, it should be denied.

2024-01-09T15:05:18+00:00

Insight Edge

Roar Rookie


He's the only young player there is Australia!

2024-01-08T08:55:59+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


I do not think that McDonald made the rule that if you finish on top of the ladder and draw in the final you get the trophy. Cannot blame him for exploiting the rules. That is good coaching.

2024-01-08T08:34:39+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


McDonald's Shield wins,were, how can I say this without causing apoplexy in his supporters ?, the most turgid, uninspiring finals games that we've had to experience. Batting for a draw from day one,run-saving fields, fifth stump lines. Where were they played,pray tell? A blight on the competition.

2024-01-08T07:42:22+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Talks about an average of 33 like it is 60.

2024-01-08T04:03:37+00:00

Jon Snow

Roar Rookie


Fair call, wrong analogy.

2024-01-08T03:35:32+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Murphy is the one, but he’s not as readymade as a Morris or a Richardson just to step in and not miss a beat. Spinners take a bit longer and usually peak later on in their careers.

2024-01-08T03:33:28+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


In fairness to Langer - WA cricket was a complete joke when he took over. The Marsh boys had just been done for partying in the Champions league t20. It was at its lowest ebb. A lot of the success now under Voges can be attributed to the culture Cristina Matthews and Justin Langer created - then Langer went and did the same thing with CA, you could once again suggest that part of his legacy after taking over in Cape Town was leaving the team in a fantastic position for MacDonald to take over. Langer had a tougher job than MacDonald given the sort of joke of a team he inherited. Not knocking what MacDonald has achieved, but he took over a team ranked #1 in the world, not a team at its lowest ebb.

2024-01-08T02:43:21+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I will be cranking up that one in the slow cooker over winter.

2024-01-08T02:28:57+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Don Busso. Brilliant! Although if your speciality was Osso Bucco then you could be Osso Busso

2024-01-08T00:30:19+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


"Lyon may be lucky in that we don’t really have an obvious replacement". Actually we do, and you mentioned him, he just needs more time, but then so did Lyon when he started.

2024-01-08T00:22:19+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Then you know of his success at first class level with both bat and ball. If you "watched" properly, you know his batting does "cut it". To get an average of 33, how did that happen? For such a short career, a run of outs would plunge an average. How is it still up there? Perhaps some big scores that "cut it" at the highest level must have affected things.

2024-01-08T00:13:15+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


The same group got worse results under the previous coach! What McDonald has done is actually pretty spectacular. In the 18 years before McDonald took over Australia won a combined two away tests against India, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan. McDonald won three in his first 18 months! Langer’s record with the Scorchers was good but WA were nowhere the best state side under him, it was Victoria, coincidentally, under McDonald. McDonald won the Shield every year he coached in it. Langer never won the Shield.

2024-01-08T00:08:55+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


"Well half a season is all we really have" Cricket was not invented in November last year.

2024-01-07T23:46:47+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


Cue Bill Lawry: 'And he's a Victorian!'

2024-01-07T23:39:41+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Well half a season is all we really have – you can thank Cricket Australia for that because of the garbage decision to play only T20 cricket in December and January. Bancroft took every chance he had available to him, whilst guys like Handscomb, Harris and others did not. The form leading in dictates that Bancroft is the best batsman currently in Australia that isn’t in the Test side, he’s also an opener, which is the empty spot available so realistically if the selectors have any sense of picking the form player, he is the guy that goes in – there shouldn’t really be much more to it than that.

2024-01-07T23:37:19+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I genuinely think it has nothing or very little to do with this current coach - it has to do with a very good playing group he has. I could coach this same side and get them to minimum number 3 in the world - it’s not a hard job when there are only 3 genuinely good test teams. Langer proved he was a good coach - not when he coached Australia but when he coached the WA and Scorchers side and took them from a rabble to the best state side. As coach of Australia he had a so-so run, but I genuinely don’t think McDonald himself has added a huge amount.

2024-01-07T23:24:01+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


Been watching him since he was 12 or 13.

2024-01-07T22:42:37+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


I will add that South Africa were not looking like a rabble before McDonald’s team made them look like a rabble. They came to Australia having recently won a series against India, something that Australia under Langer could not do.

2024-01-07T22:07:03+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Yep. It counts for f all.

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