Mercury (Hobart)

Hazlewood fit and refreshed to boost Blues

- SCOTT BAILEY

JOSH Hazlewood is back feeling confident in his body and his position as a Test mainstay.

But he knows he could have been staring at a completely different path in 2019.

Hazlewood will begin his Australian summer today in a one-dayer for a fullstreng­th New South Wales side against Tasmania at North Sydney Oval.

The 28-year-old enjoyed almost a month off bowling after the Ashes, following a first-half of the year he spent sidelined by a back injury.

Fit again and comfortabl­e with slight changes made to his action, the rightarmer is considered a lock for Australia’s first Test against Pakistan next month.

But he concedes there was a point where he was looking at a much different year after being overlooked for the World Cup and then the first Ashes Test at Edgbaston.

“It happens pretty quickly when it’s happening, but now you look back you think it could have gone either way,” Hazlewood said at Kayo’s summer of cricket launch yesterday.

“If I didn’t play the next Test or someone was doing really well and doesn’t give an opportunit­y.

“When I was running drinks for that first Test I was just training really hard and thinking I had to make the most of an opportunit­y.”

The Edgbaston Test — which Australia won — marked the first time Hazlewood had been dropped from the Test side in his 4½-year career.

“When the team wins [at Edgbaston] you’re not expecting changes [to be able to come back in],” Hazlewood reflected.

“I knew Patto [Victorian quick James Pattinson] had bowled a fair bit and they had a plan for him.

“So I knew the opportunit­y was going to come, whether it was the second Test or third Test.

“And then whether [Mitchell] Starc or I go in was another call.”

Recalled for the second Test at Lord’s, Hazlewood finished the series with 20 wickets at 21.85 to erase any doubt over his spot in the team.

“Yeah, I think [I feel cemented in the side now],” he said.

“You never feel too comfortabl­e in the Australian cricket team, but you always put it on yourself to perform every game the best you can.”

Hazlewood’s NSW return today will come alongside Starc, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon.

It will mark the first time Australia’s first-choice bowling quartet have played a one-dayer for NSW together, with Hazlewood ready to ramp up his preparatio­ns for the summer.

“The whole body feels really good,” Hazlewood said.

“A couple of quiet weeks after the Ashes back here at home [helped].”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia