Australian cricket summer summary: A successful but not great season as bigger challenges await

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Now that stumps have been called on the home summer season for the Australian men’s cricket team, it has been a success by any measure apart from a couple of hiccups. 

The Test loss at the Gabba and the dead rubber defeat in Tuesday’s final T20 clash with the Windies were the only blemishes in an otherwise dominant display. 

But with Pakistan and the Windies both in various stages of rebuilding, the Australians are well aware greater challenges await in the form of the upcoming two-Test tour of New Zealand, the mid-year T20 World Cup and next summer’s five-match blockbuster at home against India. 

Across the three formats here’s how the Australians stacked up this summer and how they’re placed for the future. 

Tests

Overall it was a good summer results wise although you could make a case that they should have won all five matches so dropping the Gabba Test to the Windies means they’ve fallen short of expectations. 

It was a weird summer in that the majority of the team didn’t perform to the high standards they demand apart from all-rounder Mitchell Marsh and supremely reliable Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood. 

The way Cummins dismembered the Pakistani batting units in Melbourne and Sydney is as well as he’s ever bowled. And he’s seemingly been bowling well forever. 

But did the team overall make much progress? Not particularly. 

Usman Khawaja was solid, Marnus Labuschagne is in a dry spell, Travis Head is feast or famine and Alex Carey has been dependable without being outstanding. 

The drawn-out David Warner departure was handled with trademark procrastination by the selection panel with the decision virtually being made for them by Steve Smith surprisingly volunteering to open and no other batter wanting a bar of it. 

Steve Smith. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

His elevation allowed the selectors to trot out the “we’re picking the best six batters in the country” line although Cameron Green has not backed up that assessment in his three return innings at No.4. 

Green is too high in the order and as a steady scorer like the three batters above him, there is an imbalance in the line-up. Head and Marsh are similar in that they are vulnerable to being dismissed early with their naturally aggressive styles. 

When it comes off it’s spectacular but if Green is consistently making modest totals and those two fail to launch, the pressure builds on Carey and a long batting tail. 

The main goal is defending the World Test Championship crown, so that’s off to a reasonable start but their hopes of qualifying for next year’s final will come down to how they fare in NZ and in next summer’s showdown with India, who have beaten Australia in their past four series. 

ODIs

On the back of their slightly unexpected upset win over India at Ahmedabad in the World Cup final, the ODI side is in the honeymoon period where the players, coaches and selectors can do whatever they want. 

The next World Cup is a long way away, 2027 in South Africa, but already the likes of Xavier Bartlett, Lance Morris, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Matt Short and Aaron Hardie are being given a test drive to see if they are up to code. 

And all suggestions thus far are that the kids are alright. 

Regeneration has been painfully slow in the five-day format but in the 50-over team, there is more than enough talent waiting in the wings to step up when Mitchell Starc, Glenn Maxwell, Hazlewood and Smith fade away. 

Jake Fraser-McGurk, Will Sutherland, Xavier Bartlett and Matt Short at Melbourne Cricket Ground. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

Warner’s retirement has given several candidates a sniff of the vacancy at the top of the order but expect Marsh to get the first decent crack at the spot alongside Head to see if he can thrive when the ball is new. 

Bartlett’s combined 8-38 from his first two ODIs was a welcome boost to Australia’s white-ball pace stocks which are already overflowing with options like Sean Abbott and Nathan Ellis who already find it hard to get a run.  

T20s

The missing piece in the Cricket Australia trophy cabinet. 

Unlike the other two squads, the T20 side is in the final stages of its plan to complete the trifecta of trophies. 

There’s realistically probably one batting spot and the keeper’s role up for grabs in the first-choice XI with the other selection candidates jostling for positions to fill out the squad for the trip to the Caribbean in June. 

The selectors are in no great hurry, nor do they need to be, to lock in anything. They don’t seem to have arrived on a decision over who will captain the side. 

Marsh is the frontrunner but Cummins could still take it on for a hit-and-run mission while Matthew Wade remains in the mix even though it’s debatable whether he’s in their best XI. 

Glenn Maxwell switch-hits a six against West Indies at Adelaide Oval. (Photo by Sarah Reed/Getty Images)

Adam Gilchrist said on Fox Cricket commentary during game three of the T20 series against the Windies that he thinks Inglis is the better keeper but Wade retained the gloves when they both played. 

Wade, Smith and Marcus Stoinis are competing for the final spot in the batting order behind the retiring Warner, Head and Marsh at the top of the order with Maxwell and Tim David the designated power-hitting finishers. 

The 2-1 series win over the Windies was not a good one for Jason Behrendorff’s chances of making the squad. 

He was taken down a couple of times and his expensive figures could mean Australia’s T20 player of the year could soon be squeezed out with Spencer Johnson, Morris and Bartlett emerging from the fast bowling pack. 

When compared with the other heavyweight sides, Australia stack up well on paper heading into the Cup and such is their daunting record in major tournaments, that will be enough to send shivers down the spines of a few of their rivals for the trophy. 

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-19T09:21:48+00:00

ColinT

Roar Rookie


Apologies, my mistake. The article is about the three forms but clearly the bit you were commenting on is the t20 part of the article.

2024-02-19T09:14:37+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


How has it hindered? This strategy has won much more than it has lost. They are not invincible. Teams lose. And you didn't answer the question directly. It's not a matter whether you feel you would perform better later on as a CEO if you had a trial run, it's whether the current CEO would want to vacate their seat for an unknown performer. Of course not. You have to earn selection. It's a merit based team, not an A team.

2024-02-19T06:45:04+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Why?

2024-02-19T06:44:34+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The test team. There are so many better than him in white ball games (isn't that what we're talking about here?)

2024-02-19T06:08:15+00:00

ColinT

Roar Rookie


Agree on Green but not on Smith. Ludicrous to claim he no longer warrants a spot in the team.

2024-02-17T21:43:05+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Reckon Puc & Sutherland should be playing test cricket by years end.

2024-02-17T09:02:52+00:00

Mitcher

Roar Rookie


Paul Suttor cricket scribe summer summary: A successful click rate but not great content as genuine analysis awaits.

2024-02-17T04:56:58+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


Yep, we should never have lost the Gabba test. WI kept themselves in the game and Shamar was fantastic, but 216 wasn't a hard get. I reckon JL would have given them an Olympic class spray! :laughing:

2024-02-17T02:03:05+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I'm sure one of our guys will succumb to a soft tissue injury

2024-02-17T01:01:17+00:00

Targa

Roar Rookie


Unfortunately for the NZ -Oz series Kyle Jamieson is out injured.

2024-02-16T11:12:09+00:00

Steele

Roar Rookie


Interesting analogy, however did it help or hinder the team using the set and forget method? I think it hindered. Pakistan were already beaten going into game three and we lost game two against the Windie’s. I’m thinking big picture, the side is ageing and India got on top of our attack for the last two tours, so perhaps we should be exploring more options leading up to next summer. If I’ve filled in as CEO a year prior to perhaps getting the gig then yes, I am probably going to perform better. How is the team looking to improve?

2024-02-16T06:32:02+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Do you ask your boss if you can be acting CEO for a day or two so you can feel right when/if the times comes?

2024-02-16T05:32:56+00:00

Steele

Roar Rookie


I think the selectors should have blooded a couple new faces in the Test series. Particularly the dead rubber against Pakistan and the final game against the Windie’s. You want the next gen to feel comfortable when the time comes, not thrown to the wolves if a crucial injury occurs such as Lyon’s in England.

2024-02-16T04:29:21+00:00

BillyW

Roar Rookie


I'm only interested in the Test side of things..... On Warner- his departure was hardly drawn out, the exact date was well known for some time...his replacement was a Suprise.. On Green- his technique and temperament is classic #4 (even if, in your opinion, his first 3 innings there doesn't suggest it...3! thats right just 3...and his third demonstrated he belongs there!)....I have no idea why you would assume nothing but modest scores from him there? This side is in need of an overhaul with most closer to the end of a fine career then the start....Player of Greens ability and continued exposure will be paramount to that transition being a smooth one...

2024-02-16T02:52:23+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


I enjoyed the Test series this summer. It was more competitive than most ‘experts’ were predicting. And provides enough evidence to say that if there was some way of limiting the plethora of T20 comps happening around the world and get some investment going in the ‘smaller’ nations’ Test setups, there is real promise in several of these teams. The international T20 team? It’s all a lottery really, isn’t it… on any given day, most teams could competitive against any other team. Behrendorff blotted his copybook though…I think he’s dropped down the list.

2024-02-16T01:35:51+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Yup. Absolutely bamboozling. Jake Fraser-McGurk is surely the person Australia should be turning to for that final spot now.

2024-02-16T00:36:39+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


“if Green is consistently making modest totals and those two fail to launch, the pressure builds on Carey and a long batting tail.” That’s just an argument that all batsmen need to make a decent amount of runs over an extended period for the team to succeed, nothing in particular about Green. All batters make errors and all get good balls that nick them off occasionally early on. I’m not sure Head and Marsh are more feast or famine than anyone else. Marsh has made 8 scores over 30 out of 14 since his return, Head has made 6 of 14, but only two scores over 50. They both got low scores against Windies when Green made his return, apart from Head’s 100. Don’t think the new players in the ODI side proved anything, though Bartlett looks promising and Inglis looked very good if you call him a new boy. That was a poor Windies team. Fraser-McGurk looks completely hit and miss at this stage, I wouldn’t read anything into him carting 125 kph Forde for a few sixes. Hardie and Morris did little.

2024-02-15T23:48:59+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


It was a strange Test summer. I really hoped Pakistan would put up more of fight and wanted to see a genuine contest between Babar Azam and the 4 quicks, but he was out of touch and the rest of batting unit were no match for Cummins and co. The drawn series with the Windies highlighted how poor our batting has been in recent times. Granted Shamar Joseph bowled outstandingly at the Gabba but the world's best Test team couldn't chase down 216, at home, with 4 of the top 11 ranked bats in Test cricket playing? All that said, the Test cricket was entertaining, but this is an Aussie team in decline based on this summer. The top 6 need to have a good look at themselves and sort out what ails them. The bowlers can;t continue to win game with ball and bat.

2024-02-15T23:47:05+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Crazy stuff for sure.

2024-02-15T23:45:45+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Inertia

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