Mercury (Hobart)

Mr Inconsiste­ncy could be out the door

- RICHARD EARLE

SHAUN Marsh’s feast or famine Test ride continues to polarise, but history suggests the veteran is under serious pressure to continue his baggy green journey.

Marsh is capable of thrilling and frustratin­g in equal measure, but the gap between his six tons, nine half-centuries and failures have been a millstone over 35 Tests.

Marsh, 35, capped the worst run of scores under 10 runs by an Australian top-five batsman for 130 years with a pedestrian exit to Indian nemesis Ravi Ashwin in the second session yesterday.

Marsh is the last Australian batsman in the top five to make six consecutiv­e single- figure scores since George Bonnor in 1888. Marsh has been dismissed for 7, 7, 0, 3, 4 and 2 stretching back to the Wanderers Test against South Africa in March.

Bonnor never played again after making a duck — his 10th score under 10 — at Old Trafford when caught by WG Grace off brilliant England allrounder Bobby Peel.

Skipper Tim Paine said Mitch Marsh was axed as the all-rounder’s numbers didn’t stack up and his older sibling must deliver in Australia’s second innings. Having argued for Mitch Marsh’s exclusion from the first Test, critic Geoff Lawson’s push for “perpetual disappoint­ment” Shaun Marsh’s axing could gain momentum.

Marsh dragged a wide and full Ashwin delivery on to his stumps from the final ball of the first over after lunch, walking into a trap set by Indian skipper Virat Kohli.

“Full credit to Ashwin and Virat Kohli. There was fortune involved but the field was set perfectly, the carrot was dangled and he bit it nicely,” former England skipper Michael Vaughan said on Fox Sports.

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