Travis should Head up the order until Green proves he’s four-midable enough to earn important spot

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Just because Cameron Green gobbles up bowing attacks at first-class level at four shouldn’t necessarily mean he gets the gig in the Test team. 

Travis Head bats at four when he makes a rare appearance for South Australia and at this point in their respective careers, is a more reliable option than Green. 

Even though Head’s aggressive approach can mean he falls cheaply more often than he would if he adopted a more conservative mindset, he also possesses the ability to change the momentum of a game when wickets are falling. 

He did that in the first innings of this week’s Test mismatch against the West Indies with the Aussies in a tricky spot at 3-67 after Green and converted opener Steve Smith failed in their opening foray into their new positions. 

Head’s making a habit of hitting hundreds when the Aussies are in strife. He did so twice to finally cement his spot in the side during the 2021-22 Ashes and in last year’s World Test Championship final against India at The Oval, not to mention his evisceration of the same opponents in the ODI World Cup decider. 

His strike rate is much quicker than Australia’s post-David Warner top order of Smith, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne and Green, who are all hovering at below 50 over the past couple of years. 

Travis Head. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

And wouldn’t it be easier for Green to bat five while he tries to re-establish himself in the Test team? 

There is less pressure to set the foundation for the innings at five and it would also give him longer to recharge his batteries after bowling. 

Apart from the Jacques Kallis anomaly, pretty much all the world’s great fast bowling all-rounders of yesteryear batted five or lower for the majority of their careers due to the high physical workload of the role. 

Green seems to have a trouble moving through the gears when he is at the batting crease. 

He usually looks assured whenever he comes in but when it comes time to up the ante, he either gets out and fails to convert a start like his 14 in Adelaide or he plods along without ever getting on top of the bowling. 

It’s not like he can’t. We’ve seen him pierce infields and clear boundary ropes in the white-ball formats but whether he’s worried about getting out or doesn’t yet have the confidence at Test level, he rarely dominates bowling attacks in the five-day format. 

Of his 37 innings in 25 Tests, what can no longer be called a small sample size, he has faced 50 or more deliveries on 19 occasions. 

But even in those innings, his strike rate has been north of 50 only six times. 

His career strike rate of 46.69 will surely increase over time along with his rather average average of 33. 

Sandwiching him in between Head and another free scorer in Mitchell Marsh will alleviate that burden on him to be mindful of scoring too slow instead of following on from Khawaja, Smith and Labuschagne. 

Another reason why it makes sense to drop Green down a slot for now is to put the onus back on him to justify his selection. 

He’s been the chosen one for a few years now, anointed as the player most likely to be the cornerstone of the Australian batting line-up when the current stars fade into retirement. 

Most of Australia’s previous batting mainstays like Steve and Mark Waugh, Ricky Ponting and Smith had to earn their stripes at No.6 before they rose up the order to settle in their preferred positions. 

There is a perception that Green is having too much served to him on a platter without the 24-year-old having to do the hard yards. 

Australia have just three more Tests – Thursday’s Gabba assignment against the Windies and an upcoming two-match tour of New Zealand- to strike the right balance before next summer’s showdown on home soil against India. 

The Border-Gavaskar Trophy is one of the few missing items in Cricket Australia’s cabinet and after losing the past two series Down Under, it can no longer be assumed that the foreign conditions will bring India undone. 

Their spinners are not as effective in Australia but Mohammed Siraj and Jasprit Bumrah are world-class seamers who relish the chance to operate on favourable surfaces. 

Australia are adamant they have their six best Test batters in the XI but they don’t have many more chances left to tinker with their line-up. 

If Green continues to flounder at four, they should look to bring Head up a notch to get one of their most consistent run-getters in a more prominent role and give their blue-chip prospect a little more leeway so he can live up to his potential. 

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-23T01:07:55+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Then you have interesting maths.

2024-01-23T01:01:36+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Same.

2024-01-23T00:45:57+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'm talking about this season.

2024-01-23T00:36:20+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Averaging 12 in tests this year.

2024-01-23T00:17:30+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He is batting well. Averaging 96 in Shield this year. 3 superb boundaries in his only test outing this summer. You really do need to watch some cricket.

2024-01-22T21:17:49+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Just wondering what other creative reasons you might come up with for Green not batting well.

2024-01-22T14:14:16+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You've forgotten what you were talking about. On a drunken tangent now.

2024-01-22T14:12:17+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


No you weren't. The St Justin stuff proves that.

2024-01-22T14:11:16+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He has nothing to do with Fremantle. He's a north of the river boy. On the board of West Coast.

2024-01-22T09:16:18+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


It is a very creative comment. Does he also struggle against ordinary spinners like Root and Ali because he has batted against good spinners in the past? Does he struggle on good wickets because occasionally he has to bat on more challenging wickets?

2024-01-22T08:22:12+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2024-01-22T08:21:40+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


I lived in the west for 20 years, and most folk there aren't rude like the Don of Fremantle. I'm a foundation member of the Dockers actually, went to their first ever game at East Fremantle Oval.

2024-01-22T08:17:21+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


I was being polite, have a go at it mate, you might surprise yourself.

2024-01-22T08:17:10+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


The selectors are pinning hopes he becomes our No.4 for the foreseeable future. He should benefit playing some minnow teams over the next few months but Shamar Joseph is a spirited bowler for the Windies. Great viewing how he combats this young gun in Brisbane.

2024-01-22T08:15:46+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


What and miss out on parochial Sandgroper gibber?

2024-01-22T08:10:10+00:00

mrl

Roar Rookie


It’s brilliant. Rowdy, donfreo, doctorod, Grem, and the others too many to mention…

2024-01-22T08:02:19+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


I really like this forum, we mostly get on and care about one another. F.Book is a bit DH laden.

2024-01-22T07:58:47+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


Langer Don.

2024-01-22T07:58:02+00:00

aerial lizard

Roar Rookie


Take it however you can get it.

2024-01-22T06:03:00+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


Well, if he bats at 8, then who is batting above him? Or are you playing him as one of four bowlers? Didn't work out so well in the Ashes.

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