Mercury (Hobart)

Skipper sticks by Marnus

Batsman shows fight

- BEN HORNE Australia v New Zealand

TIM Paine has lauded the secret bravery of Marnus Labuschagn­e and feels there is no way his bubble is going to burst.

The No. 3 position in the Test batting order has proven a poisoned chalice for Australian cricket over the past decade, with more than a dozen players passing through the revolving door since the retirement of the great Ricky Ponting.

But Paine revealed yesterday Labuschagn­e did not fear becoming another statistic, and in fact actively campaigned to be entrusted with the heavy-duty responsibi­lity of anchoring the line-up.

Labuschagn­e was offered the easier entry into the Test match cauldron at No.5, but wouldn’t cop any suggestion of a soft landing and has delivered with back-to-back centuries.

“I think there was a conversati­on at one stage about maybe moving him down the order and starting him at 5, but he didn’t want a bar of it,” said Paine. “He wants to be a star Test match internatio­nal cricketer and sees himself as a No.3. We’re rapt with the way he’s started in that position and look forward to watching him continue to get better.

“He’d be hard to move out of there now, that’s for sure.”

This summer isn’t the first time Labuschagn­e — who is averaging 53 from 11 Tests — laid bare his warrior-like instincts. Back in the New Year, with Australia at rock bottom after surrenderi­ng a series on home soil to India, selectors wielded the axe and asked a new-look team to go to battle at the SCG for a lost cause.

Ahead of other more experience­d campaigner­s like Shaun Marsh and Travis Head, 25-year-old Labuschagn­e again put his hand up to take the bullets at No.3 and wouldn’t have it any other way.

At the Gabba, after David Warner and Joe Burns had put on more than 200 runs for the first wicket, coach Justin Langer also floated the idea of promoting Steve Smith to No. 3.

Labuschagn­e retorted with something along the lines of, ‘you’ve got to be kidding’.

Greg Chappell — himself one of Australia’s premier No.3 batsmen – said last week that Labuschagn­e has the ability and demeanour to follow in the footsteps of he, and others like Ponting, Ian Chappell and Sir Donald Bradman.

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