Townsville Bulletin

Australia’s Ashes stocks are lean, but that’s okay

- ROBERT CRADDOCK

AUSTRALIA are facing the uncomforta­ble truth that there are not six decent Test batsmen in the country.

Don’t panic. This is the rule rather than the exception.

If you take out the golden decade from 1995- 2005, when players such as Mike Hussey, Matt Hayden and Darren Lehmann often missed selection despite averaging around 50 in first- class cricket, the last man chosen in the batting order in most eras was some form of battler on trial.

Sometimes there are two or three of them in the mix. But it does not take away the fact that the well is nowhere near as deep as it should be.

Rod Marsh had a sorrowful reign as a national cricket selection chairman but the first time he opened his mouth in the job back in May, 2014, he made a point that still rings true.

“I don’t think our batting is as good as it should be for a nation of our strength,” Marsh said.

“Technicall­y, I don’t think it’s good enough.

“There has been a period of time where technique hasn’t been taught as well as it could have been.’’

Three years on Marsh is long gone but he is as right now as he was then.

It appears the pancake flat decks of Twenty20, 50- over and even Test cricket have played their part in raising a generation of batsmen who do not adapt well to challenge and change.

Batsmen’s prime priorities these days are domination, not resilience or subtle survival skills.

A swinging ball is as dangerous as it has ever been, a fact reinforced by the weekend’s Sheffield Shield results.

Much has been made of the shootout between up to eight players for the No. 6 batting spot for the first Test at the Gabba but it would not be a shootout at all if any of them were true Test batsmen.

The standard of competitio­n between the likes of Glenn Maxwell, Shaun Marsh, Marcus Stoinis, Nic Maddinson and Moises Henriques and company, none of whom stood out on the opening round of Shield fixtures, is not high.

None of them will be unlucky not to make the team. Many of them have averages in the mid- 30s.

Queensland­er Chris Lynn is not even sure whether he will play red ball cricket again but sitting back watching the weekend’s events must make his sore shoulder feel like a pain in the butt.

He is a better batsman than all of them, averaging 43.5 in a first- class career limited to just 41 games in seven years.

Had he been playing now, two 50s would be enough to get him in the Test team, making the pain in that shoulder seem more acute than ever.

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