The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Australian selectors called ‘morons’ after Paine’s recall

Wicketkeep­er back after seven years for first Test Rookie opener Bancroft ousts off-form Renshaw

- By Nick Hoult CRICKET NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

Australia have announced their 13man squad to play England in the first Test at the Gabba on Nov 23 and have recalled Tim Paine to keep wicket. It is an extraordin­ary comeback and a selection that was greeted by surprise and anger in Australia when it was announced.

Paine will wear the baggy green once more after seven years out of the Test side in an attempt to solve the wicketkeep­ing dilemma that has puzzled Australia since the retirement of Brad Haddin in one of three shock decisions by the Australia selectors (Trevor Hohns, Greg Chappell and Darren Lehmann).

It has been described in the Australian media as a “stunning recall” while former leg spinner Stuart Macgill described the selectors as “morons masqueradi­ng as mentors” after news broke of Paine’s selection. Paine has kept wicket in only three state games in the past two years, not scored a first-class hundred since 2006 and averages a modest 29 in his first-class career overall. Lehmann, the Australia coach who retired from cricket in 2007, has more recently scored a first-class hundred than Paine. But he has leapfrogge­d incumbent keeper Matthew Wade and Peter Nevill.

England will at least have the advantage of playing against him recently. He captained the Cricket Australia XI in Adelaide last week where he scored a half century.

The call-ups of Paine, 32, and the 34 year-old Shaun Marsh, who will bat in Australia’s problem position at six, come just a year after the selectors vowed to turn to youth after the home series defeat to South Africa. In the wake of that loss, Matt Renshaw was given a chance to open and he responded with 184 in his fourth Test but is dropped after a slow start to the Sheffield Shield season in favour of Western Australia’s Cameron Bancroft. He is now in line for a Test debut at the Gabba opening with David Warner.

Australia were worried about Renshaw’s technique against James Anderson but Bancroft, who is also a wicketkeep­er but will play in Brisbane as a batsman, was given a glowing recommenda­tion by his state coach, Justin Langer, after a double hundred against South Australia last week.

With Marsh at six instead of a bowling all-rounder it suggests Australia are worried about their batting line-up against England’s bowling attack. They probably also feel a four-man attack of Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon is enough to deal with England. But picking only three seamers is a gamble given the injury records of the three quicks.

Chadd Sayers, an uncapped 30-year-old quick bowler from South Australia who has claimed 243 first-class wickets at 23.55 and Jackson Bird, another fast medium bowler, have been included as back-ups for the likely Test pace attack.

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