Mercury (Hobart)

Wade in doubt as one-day stumper

- ROB FORSAITH

AUSTRALIA’S World Cup defence, working out who should be wicketkeep­er and various workload dilemmas will weigh on selectors’ minds when they pick an ODI squad early next week.

England will remain in Australia after the Ashes for a five-match ODI series that starts on January 14 at the MCG. Australia’s selectors are expected to settle on a small ODI squad, most likely featuring 13 players, before the fifth Test.

Matthew Wade is the incumbent one-day gloveman, having toured India earlier this year, but is considered a longshot to hold on to the job.

Tim Paine replaced Wade in the Test XI earlier this summer and could easily do the same in the 50-over format. Paine is already Australia’s incumbent Twenty20 stumper.

Peter Handscomb is another option, having taken the gloves in a handful of ODIs this year, while uncapped South Australian Alex Carey is also in the mix.

Carey, billed as an Ashes bolter earlier this year and highly rated by Trevor Hohns’ panel, has backed up his maiden first-class ton with a couple of impressive T20 innings for the Adelaide Strikers.

The upcoming one-dayers are relatively meaningles­s compared to the current fiveTest series, but Australia is already mapping out its plans for the 2019 World Cup.

Steve Smith has made it clear winning the tournament is one of the big items left on his bucket list.

The Cup holders had an underwhelm­ing Champions Trophy campaign in England this year, with a rain-affected loss to the hosts ensuring they failed to progress beyond the group stage.

“It would be fantastic to retain the trophy we won so emphatical­ly in 2015,” Smith wrote in his recently released biography.

“The Champions Trophy in 2017 left me under no illusions about how tough a task it will be.”

 ??  ?? LONGSHOT: Matthew Wade.
LONGSHOT: Matthew Wade.

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