The two factors that’ll decide whether Smith’s opening gambit is a surprising success or ill-conceived failure

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Moving Steve Smith to opener will be a success or failure depending on two factors – whether Australia win at home next summer against India and then retain the Ashes in 2025-26. 

The pair of upcoming two-match series against the West Indies on home soil and the greener turf of New Zealand are testing grounds for the Smith experiment, which was confirmed by chief selector George Bailey on Wednesday afternoon.

If it fails, then next summer’s early rounds of the Sheffield Shield will be a shoot-out between Cameron Bancroft, Matt Renshaw, Will Pucovski, Marcus Harris and any other male cricketer who can prove they can adeptly face the new ball from 22 yards with a piece of willow in hand. 

A couple more two-match series in Sri Lanka and the Caribbean, as well as a likely appearance in the World Test Championship final, will serve as next year’s entree to the Ashes of 2025-26. 

All going well, that could be the perfect time for Smith to bring down the curtain on his record-breaking career which has been unorthodox in pretty much every way – has it been mentioned previously that he started out as a leg-spinner? 

Smith is 34 and an old one at that. He will be doing well to last until the final Ashes Test a couple of years from now judging by the way he moves in the outfield these days.

Colombian singer Shakira is not known specifically for her cricket knowledge and, truth be told, it is probably limited but her assertion that the hips don’t lie holds true for Smith.

Have you noticed the way he has been labouring around the outfield of late with his arms swinging in imperfect unison with his lower limbs? 

For someone who has spent nearly half their lifetime playing cricket at an elite level, he’s showing signs of significant wear and tear.

Smith looks certain to get the opportunity that any established Sheffield Shield opener in the country would like nothing more than to receive – the chance to prove yourself at the top of the order at the batting-friendly Adelaide Oval next week against a Windies side which is a shadow of a decade ago let alone the glory years of last century. 

It would be a surprise if Smith didn’t rack up a big score or two at Adelaide or the day-nighter at the Gabba despite the opening position being foreign to him at first-class level. 

Cameron Green spent most of last summer padded up waiting for a bat when he was listed at No.6 against the Windies. The same fate may befall him even he’s two slots higher in the order.

Steve Smith plays a pull shot against the Windies in Perth. (Photo by Quinn Rooney – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

New Zealand’s superior attack and bowler-friendly conditions will prove a stiffer challenge for Smith and that’s when the experiment will get the official rubber stamp as a viable longish-term option from the Australian brains trust or cast into the circular file under George Bailey’s Tasmanian oak desk. 

There have been all sorts of statistics thrown out as conjecture has raged about whether Smith would be effective against the new ball despite only batting no higher than three for NSW or Australia. 

The Smith of old would eat up the new ball for breakfast like Shooter McGavin ate up, well, let’s just say other things. 

Swing weren’t no thing to him and seam seemingly had no effect on the peak version of Smith in 2019 who was in a different league during the Ashes in amassing 774 runs at 110. 

Amazingly, despite batting just seven times due to a concussion from a Jofra Archer thunderbolt, he scored more than double any other player in the series apart from Ben Stokes (441 at 55) and Rory Burns (390 at 39). 

Whether the high-class attack of Archer, Stokes and Stuart Broad got movement in or away from Smith’s blade, he was in a constant zone of stepping in front of his stumps to flick the ball to the leg-side boundary. 

If they tried to keep the ball wide of the off stump, the slips cordon rarely came into play as he feasted through covers and point.

Steve Smith was struck on the neck by a venomous Jofra Archer bouncer at Lord’s in 2019. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

Over the past few years he has no longer been that dominant player, or even close to it. 

And if the move to opener is based around ensuring Australia are fielding their optimal line-up for the showdowns with India and England, those two teams have been his kryptonite – even on home turf – since he owned those Ashes five years ago. 

Against India he managed a paltry 145 at 29 in four Tests on their turning tracks last year after chalking up 313 at 44.71 in the 2020-21 Border-Gavaskar Trophy series loss in Australia. 

The one bright spot was his 121 in the 2023 World Test Championship final at The Oval in the conditions least suited to India’s bowling attack.

In the previous Ashes series in Australia, he struggled through all five Tests for 244 runs at 30.5 and when the contest moved to England last year, he tallied a modest 373 at 37.3, boosted by his one century – 110 at Lords. 

He’s continued his mammoth scoring feats in recent years in Sri Lanka, at home to the West Indies and South Africa, but when it comes to Australia’s two closest rivals and main challengers to their global five-day throne, Smith is a mere mortal.

Whether he can conjure up a couple of vintage campaigns against those opponents in the twilight of his career looks rather unlikely whether the selectors move him to opener or not.

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-11T07:44:35+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


How am i engaging emotionally?? I'm simply stating the facts. Smith volunteered to open and he's been selected at the expense of specialist openers. We won't know whether he is the best until he does it. But, as he has volunteered to do something he has no prior experience in in the national team, conversely one must hold him to a higher standard. If he is going to talk the talk, he has to walk the walk. He is not a reluctant opener. He wants this.

2024-01-11T07:01:04+00:00

carnivean

Roar Rookie


Then I cannot agree with you. You're not engaging rationally but rather emotionally.

2024-01-11T02:22:13+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Depends on whether you are using "Windows™" or "Outlook®"

2024-01-11T01:59:27+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Well, Smith has no average or no record at all as an opener, and - as needs to be said again - is volunteering for the role. He's not being chucked under the bus. He wants this. So, he needs to prove himself. And as such, the bar needs to be higher.

2024-01-11T01:54:55+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


But oddly to force a Western Australian back into the team, which didn't stop a poster above alleging East Coast bias.

2024-01-11T01:51:44+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Given his three 'competitors' for the spot all have test averages in the 30 range and first class averages in the high 30's range, that's a bit harsh.

2024-01-11T01:44:22+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


That's not my view, I just can't see it.

2024-01-11T01:42:55+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Or they are incumbent centred. You know Hazlewood is still 7th ranked in the world and improved that ranking against Pakstan right? Starc has his moments, but his results have always been up and down. Pakistan never put on even an average innings score and yet apparently our bowling attack is undeserving and surviving on reputation? This is after becoming world champions in two formats and retaining the Ashes in England.

2024-01-11T01:38:07+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


In literally no test team on earth would this happen. Look at how Tendulkar was nursed through his twilight years. Jayasuriya played as long as he wanted. Lara as well. Stokes can play for England whevener he wants, etc. Someone with the credits in the bank as an all time great like Smith, mostly gets to play until he doesn't want to. Just like Ponting. Border got cranky when the selectors finally gave him the tap at 39. Taylor got to play through a huge slump. Etc. Etc.

2024-01-10T23:41:31+00:00

Targa

Roar Rookie


That's a bit of a meaningless stat though as Australia played far far more tests than anyone else. It just shows he got fewer runs than Khawaja but more than Labuschagne and Head.

2024-01-10T23:37:57+00:00

Targa

Roar Rookie


Harry Brook is (at the moment) ahead of Voges. Re Smith his average has dropped below the likes of Barrington, Weekes, and Hammond and looks likely to drop lower than what Sobers and Sangakkara managed.

2024-01-10T11:29:35+00:00

Lukas

Roar Pro


Perhaps he's more of an in the moment type guy? Wants to keep playing but wants a new challenge? Having opened and batted 3 and 4 I'll say this, for anyone experiencing any kind of nervous issues, 3 and 4 are the worst, and the worst of all worlds. Sometimes you're in early under the pump and sometimes you wait. With opening you always knew the equation before you started....hard new rock, fired up opposition. One can't discount the possibility this will be good for Smith...

2024-01-10T11:09:11+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


No. Ponting average 60 for one test (mid way through his 100th). Hussey averaged 60 very early on in his career. After his 32nd (of 79 tests) his average dropped below 60 and then he ultimately spent the rest of his career hovering between 51-53. In fact, in the 47 tests since the average dipped below 60, he batted at 46. Good, not great. Excellent career. But he had a terrific first two years and then a fairly standard rest of his career.

2024-01-10T10:45:42+00:00

Bobbo7

Roar Rookie


Ponting and Hussey averaged well into 60s for a bit. Smith had amazing run but I still rate Ponting at 3 as a superior batsman.

2024-01-10T10:40:51+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Come now Anything above 50 is still great. Few players have actually retired 50+. As if today he would need 26 ducks in a row to see his average dip below 50. He will be a 50+ great. It's whether he wants to join the rare company of 55+

2024-01-10T09:53:13+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


It’s gonna be sad to see his average go down to a very good instead of great level

2024-01-10T09:50:53+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


It’s not hard at all.

2024-01-10T09:25:02+00:00

ant

Roar Rookie


point conceded.

2024-01-10T09:05:49+00:00

Riggers

Roar Rookie


All of these comments are interesting. Based on my research, Green has a better average in test cricket, than Bancroft, Harris and Renshaw. Moving smith up, might not work, however, none of these three have demanded a spot surely?

AUTHOR

2024-01-10T08:35:10+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


Warner is the only player you can make that case for. The current selectors are conservative and give many players way too long before dropping them but statelines have little to do with that

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