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2nd Test: Australia v Sri Lanka at Melbourne Dec 26-30, 2012

Horrie Is God

First Grade
Messages
8,073
Gilly & Maher are worried about how stressful the captaincy will be for Watto..

http://www.foxsports.com.au/cricket/australia/former-players-adam-gilchrist-and-jimmy-maher-say-captaincy-could-be-too-much-for-shane-watson/story-fn2mcu3x-1226540222655#.UNEUyeQ3ufU

Former players Adam Gilchrist and Jimmy Maher say captaincy could be too much for Shane Watson..

By Peter Badel The Courier-Mail December 19, 2012 10:50AM

Australian cricket fans have written off Shane Watson's captaincy credentials as Michael Clarke's battle to be fit for the Boxing Day Test ignited debate over Cricket Australia's leadership succession plan.

Vice-captain Watson will be officially ordained as Australia's 44th Test skipper if Clarke fails to overcome a hamstring complaint in time for the second Test against Sri Lanka at the MCG.

Watson was installed as Clarke's deputy in March 2011 after Ricky Ponting quit the captaincy, but doubts linger over his leadership ability given his already onerous responsibilities with bat and ball.

Among the concerns are Watson's tactical prowess and his own form issues with the bat after twin failures of 30 and 5 in the first Test against Sri Lanka at Blundstone Arena.

But former deputy Adam Gilchrist, who famously led Australia to a rare series win in India after an injury to skipper Ricky Ponting, believes the daunting job can bring out the best in Watson.

"It was a daunting challenge which ultimately I was glad to take on and I think Shane, if he was given the opportunity, would look at it in a similar light," said Gilchrist, who piloted Australia to their first series win in India for 35 years in late 2004.

"I expect he would be capable but we can't be sure until he does it.

"I didn't ever covet the position in a full-time role. When Ricky broke his thumb before India, almost immediately I felt sick in the stomach about having to take on the captaincy, not so much in leading the team but in a personal sense going to India where I had a few demons to bury myself going there.

"What makes it hard is the perception, even internally, that you might not be up to the job.

"I just tried to do it without making any big statements and I think Shane would adopt a similar approach."

Watson is not a complete captaincy novice. The dual Allan Border Medallist skippered the one-day side in eight matches earlier this year -- ironically after Clarke succumbed to a hamstring injury -- leading the side to four wins, three losses and a tie.

Former Australian one-day opener Jimmy Maher, who played with Watson at Queensland, said the 31-year-old faced a heavy workload juggling the captaincy with all-round duties.

"It is a huge burden for him, no question," he said.

"It's a huge load to carry. Australia has always been reluctant to make wicketkeepers captain for exactly the same reason.

"It will be a tough gig, but I think it's one that Shane Watson is up to.

"I captained Queensland as an opener and even then I had a lot to contend with.
"Doing it as a genuine all-rounder has got to present some enormous challenges, but Shane is one bloke who enjoys being directly in the game and this gives him another way to be involved."

Former Test selector Trevor Hohns believes Watson would not be daunted by the captaincy challenge.

"Shane knows his game, he knows what he has to do, it's not like he's a newcomer," he said.

"It is normal for the vice-captain to step up in those circumstances, if it is just a short-term thing normally the deputy should step up.

"He is a very experienced cricketer, one of the most experienced in the team with Michael Hussey.

"He should be able to handle the job, no doubts about that."
 

TheParraboy

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
66,269
Id give the job to Warner, he is probably most likely when Clarke retires. Give him a few gigs here and there when we can
 

Hallatia

Referee
Messages
26,433
Bird hopes for more Melbourne success
Brydon Coverdale
December 19, 2012

If Mitchell Johnson was a horses-for-courses selection against South Africa at the WACA, Jackson Bird must be a dead cert for Boxing Day at the MCG. An accurate seamer whose game revolves around making the batsmen play, Bird has had remarkable success in his only two first-class appearances at the MCG. To be fair, there's hardly a venue within Australia where his record is not outstanding.

At 26, Bird has a chance of becoming Australia's 431st Test cricketer on Boxing Day against Sri Lanka. He is effectively competing with Johnson for the final place in Australia's attack, a spot that has opened up due to the side injury suffered by Ben Hilfenhaus at Bellerive Oval. Bird might not be a like-for-like replacement for Hilfenhaus but he would offer the selectors a degree of reliability, which on Melbourne's drop-in pitches is no bad thing.

"Ben is more of a swing bowler where I tend to hit the wicket a little bit more," Bird said in Melbourne on Wednesday. "I certainly don't bowl as fast as Mitchell Johnson does. Mitch is a great bowler and I suppose whoever gets the nod between me and him will hopefully do a good job.

"The MCG is a great place to play. There's always a little bit in the wicket for the fast bowlers. I definitely do enjoy playing here ... My game works on being patient and trying to bowl the same ball every time and challenging the defence."

It's a method that has served Bird wonderfully well in his short first-class career. Last summer was his first season of state cricket, a career that was kick-started by his move from New South Wales to Tasmania. He topped the Sheffield Shield wicket tally with 53 victims and was named the tournament's Player of the Year, and this season he is again the leading wicket-taker so far.

In his 17 first-class matches, Bird has collected 87 wickets at an average of 19.72, and at the MCG his record is 14 victims at the astounding average of 12.07 from two games. In his first match at the venue, Bird collected five wickets in each innings, including the key Victorian trio of Chris Rogers, David Hussey and Cameron White in both innings. Johnson has managed only one five-wicket haul in his eight first-class appearances in Melbourne.

Of course, statistics aren't everything, but the ability to maintain such a strong record over a season and a half has impressed John Inverarity and his selection panel. Bird was picked for the Australia A tour of England earlier this year but was overlooked for the Australia A game against South Africa in November. However, Bird revealed the selectors had assured him at the time he would be firmly in contention for a Test call-up if injuries affected the frontline bowlers.

"I've been in communication with the selectors for the last couple of Test matches," Bird said. "When Ben went down I thought I might be a chance. Luckily enough I got the call ... I had pretty good communications with John Inverarity during that period when [the Australia A side] got selected so I wasn't too disappointed when I missed out. I thought it might be a good thing that they were saving me for the Test match."

Even if the call-up doesn't turn into a Test debut, it has certainly justified Bird's decision to head south from Sydney in an effort to break in to first-class cricket. It is not as if Bird was plucked from nowhere - in 2006 he was part of the Australia Under-19 World Cup squad that also featured David Warner, Matthew Wade, Usman Khawaja, Moises Henriques, Aaron Finch, Jon Holland and Ben Cutting - but he knew that his chances in New South Wales would be slim.

"I moved down there in the first place just for an opportunity," Bird said. "I always thought I was good enough to play first-class cricket but in New South Wales there were a lot of good fast bowlers going around like Pat Cummins and Trent Copeland, who were making their debuts for New South Wales and Australia. I was 24 by that time and once Tassie offered me a contract I thought it might be my last chance to play first-class cricket so I jumped at the opportunity."

Australia's selectors are glad he made the move as well.
Sauce
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
151,041
another Bluebagger who moved to Tassie, its all part of our plan for world domination
 

Canard

Immortal
Messages
34,562
That article had quotes from Gilly and Jimmy saying they think it could bring out the best in him, and then ran with a completely different Headline.
 

Hallatia

Referee
Messages
26,433
interesting headline
Law demands 'ruthless streak' from Khawaja, others
Daniel Brettig
December 20, 2012

As he set about the task of throttling back Usman Khawaja from Twenty20 to Test matches, Australia's batting coach Stuart Law spoke of his desire to return to the nation's batsmen the sort of collective "ruthless streak" that limited him to one Test in a career that ultimately reaped more than 27,000 first-class runs.

Law had the help of Ryan Harris, recuperating from shoulder surgery, plus Ben Cutting and Nathan Hauritz to bowl to Khawaja at Allan Border Field, while time was also reserved for the Pro-Batter technology that allowed the left-hander to face up to a bowling machine synchronised with video footage of Sri Lanka's pacemen and spinners.

He defended Cricket Australia's decision to pull Khawaja and the rest of the Test squad out of the BBL, and spoke with the passion of an unfulfilled international batting talent of the opportunities afforded to batsmen by the retirement of Ricky Ponting, who he debuted with in Perth in 1995.

"We're trying to get a ruthless streak back into our batters that we had going through domestic cricket 20-25 years ago," Law said. "If we can get that back where players aren't just scoring 60s and expecting the next step to happen, but they're scoring 100s, 150s and doing it consistently, not just once or twice but three, four times, that will put their names up in lights.

"What an opportunity now? Ricky Ponting, one of Australia's greatest has retired, you've got an opportunity to take over his position - you'd cut your own leg off to have that opportunity, and you want to be doing everything you possibly can to get it. I know Big Bash is a big part of the Australian cricket calendar now, but we're in the middle of a Test series.

"We just got beaten by South Africa, we've gone 1-0 up, we want to put everything into winning this next Test match so we can take a series. That's our whole objective. If that means sacrificing a few players who don't play in the Big Bash, there's more games after this Test series to be involved in and surely we're all for the greater good of Australian cricket - the Test team is the No. 1 team to play for."

Khawaja's time in Brisbane is geared more towards getting his batting rhythms and routines more right for Tests, after last summer's disastrous India series for Shaun Marsh, who came back into the national team via the BBL. Marsh made an audacious 99 for the Perth Scorchers in Melbourne, then cobbled a measly 17 runs in six innings against MS Dhoni's team, a contribution so meagre that it has probably ended his Test career. Law noted that if anything Khawaja's international shortcomings so far have been more as a fielder, runner and athlete than as a batsman, but that he would benefit from deliberate time to adjust.

"He's one of the better batsmen technically going around, he's very sound, [but] there's other things these days to playing cricket," Law said. "You've got to be able to do more than one skill. If you're not bowling you've got to be able to field, and that was pointed out to Usman a while ago that he has to improve in certain areas, as well as going back and scoring runs.

"He didn't really have a problem with his batting, he didn't get the big scores that would have kept him in the side. Usman's joined the Australian team for the Boxing Day Test, so we've got to get him prepared as best as possible for that to take place. To get him out of Twenty20 mode and back into Test mode is pretty important."

Australia's team performance manger Pat Howard, meanwhile, has spoken of how fervently CA are seeking ways of reducing the chances of the national team going a man down in mid-Test match. The loss of James Pattinson in Adelaide arguably cost Michael Clarke's team the chance to defeat South Africa, while injuries to Ben Hilfenhaus and Clarke very nearly did the same against Sri Lanka in Hobart.

"Absolutely the reality is the current situation's not good enough," Howard said of the injury toll. "We want to be better than that, and I'm really disappointed with where we're at the moment. I'm not shying away from that, and we're making sure that any issues we've seen come up have been raised. We need to be better."
Sauce
 

Earl

Coach
Messages
16,804
Shane Warne said he'd pick Jackson Bird over Mitchell Johnson and I assume the selectors are listening.
 

Earl

Coach
Messages
16,804
I reckon Johnson is favourite to be picked.

I think the only thing that MAY go in Birds favour is his ability to take the new ball, and that Australia may not want to go with 2 left armers.

My moneys on Johnson at this stage though, unfortunately
 

The Joker

Juniors
Messages
1,478
Johnson to take the new bowl and second slip to wear a helmet and shin pads
 
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unbreaK

Juniors
Messages
1,014
I pray to god that they pick Jackson Bird over Johnson.. I've never wanted anything more in my life.

5 quicks to take to England

Siddle
Pattinson
Starc
Cummins
Bird

Pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
151,041
if you look at how our staticians, or otherwise know as selectors, think Johnson is a Waca specialist where as his record at MCG is ordinary, while Bird has a very good record in FC cricket at the MCG
 

Hallatia

Referee
Messages
26,433
:lol:
Clarke predicts more bowling for Wade
Brydon Coverdale
December 21, 2012

Michael Clarke has declared his intention to give Matthew Wade further opportunities to bowl in Test cricket after he delivered an over of medium-pace against Sri Lanka in Hobart. Even by Clarke's adventurous standards, his decision to introduce Wade into the attack as Australia searched for wickets on the final day was a surprise one, especially given that Wade had never before delivered a ball in first-class cricket.

However, Wade was sharper than many people expected, and clocked up to 132kph on the speed gun as he sent down a maiden over just before the tea break. Clarke had been impressed by the way Wade had bowled in the nets during training and although he did not take a wicket, nor did he disgrace himself, and in his column in News Ltd newspapers on Friday, Clarke indicated that he would not hesitate to use Wade again.

"He bowled with good pace. There are some opening bowlers around the world who struggle to reach the 132kph Matt generated," Clarke wrote. "We're going to see more of Matthew Wade bowling in Test cricket, that's for sure. The only thing we have to figure out now is who will take the gloves, Phil Hughes, who did it last Tuesday, or Dave Warner?

"Matt got me out a couple of times in the nets and got himself an over in Test cricket. It won't be his last. He loves his bowling. And it reinforces my belief since I've been captain that it doesn't matter how we get 20 wickets or who takes them to win the Test. If Matt gets some of those or Mike Hussey or Dave Warner then great. It's like making runs. The tail makes important runs for the team, so every now and then the batters are going to have to chip in to help the bowlers."

Australia's bowling stocks were especially thin during the second innings at Bellerive Oval, where Ben Hilfenhaus was unavailable due to a side injury and Clarke's hamstring problem meant his part-time spin was also out of the equation. That allowed Clarke to try something different and while it didn't work on this occasion, unusual and successful bowling changes have been a hallmark of his captaincy.

In 19 Tests under Clarke's leadership, Michael Hussey's gentle medium-pace has resulted in five wickets, compared to two wickets in the 58 Tests Hussey played before Clarke became captain. David Warner's legspin has also brought four victims during Clarke's tenure, and in the series against South Africa Clarke turned to Ricky Ponting and Rob Quiney for overs of medium-pace.

Wade said he was "spewing" that he hadn't picked up a wicket in his one and only over, and while he wasn't expecting to become a regular Test bowler, he would be happy to roll his arm over again if required. He said given his short stature he was only likely to be used on skiddy pitches where batsmen might be troubled by the ball staying low.

"I would like to," Wade said. "The wicket was very up-and-down and I'm not the most gifted in the height department, so I think [Clarke] was just hoping I would get one to run along the ground. We're off to India [next year], I'll keep practising in the nets and hopefully he throws me the ball."
Sauce
looks like you can't get him out of the team now, but you might be able to get him out of the gloves
 
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