The Cairns Post

Warner blueprint gives partner hope

Bancroft discounts speculatio­n and focuses on performing his role

- BEN HORNE editorial@cairnspost.com.au facebook.com/TheCairnsP­ost www.cairnspost.com.au twitter.com/TheCairnsP­ost

CAMERON Bancroft is trying to feed off his opening partner’s insatiable self-belief as he fights to play his way out of a form dip and into Australia’s Test squad for South Africa.

The 25-year-old rookie has struggled since his debut Test and there is pressure on him to fire in Sydney as batting candidates Joe Burns, Glenn Maxwell and Peter Handscomb lodge their claims.

England have worked Bancroft over, particular­ly with the short ball.

He said he would not waste energy worrying about his job security, instead he wants to be a man of action who does something about it at the SCG.

David Warner is a man who always views the game with a glass half full and, even when he is going through a lean patch, he will back himself until the big hundred is made.

Bancroft has seen him do that this series, bouncing back from missing out in Adelaide and Perth to producing a blazing performanc­e at the MCG.

Renowned as perhaps the hardest trainer in all of domestic cricket, Bancroft has not found his work ethic short of par in the Australian set up, but he looks at Warner and realises how he must strive to understand his game as deeply.

“I’ve learnt he brings a lot of positive intent to the crease and that’s been really, really good for me to be part of and for me to be able to bat with him,” he said.

“He’s scored a hundred and an (86) in the last game, but even he’s gone through periods where he was challenged.

“To watch him learn from that and keep backing himself, he’s got no fear to go out and play his game.

“Playing at this level it’s all about confidence and all about belief. The only way you can do that is by action. “Life rewards action.” Bancroft believes a season in county cricket last winter was the catalyst for his rise into the Australian XI, and says he will be returning to England this year in a bid to sharpen his credential­s for the next Ashes on UK soil in 2019.

“It’s been a great learning curve and I think I’ve been starting really well, it’s just about trusting that and knowing that I’m good enough to go on and get a really big score,” he said.

PLAYING AT THIS LEVEL IT’S ALL ABOUT CONFIDENCE AND ALL ABOUT BELIEF. THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN DO THAT IS BY ACTION. CAMERON BANCROFT

 ?? Picture: AAP ?? LIKE DAVID: Cameron Bancroft is drawing on the example of his opening partner, David Warner, as he seeks to cement his place in the Australian XI
Picture: AAP LIKE DAVID: Cameron Bancroft is drawing on the example of his opening partner, David Warner, as he seeks to cement his place in the Australian XI

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