Mercury (Hobart)

GIVE GREEN SPACE TO BLOOM

- BENHORNE

SHANE Watson has pleaded with the Australian public to embrace budding superstar Cameron Green in away they could never manage for him. Australia’ s most scrutinise­d modern- day cricketer signed off from his stellar career this week with a wish that the young prodigy, who Greg Chappell has dubbed the best talent since Ricky Ponting, not be held to unrealisti­c expectatio­ns just because of his freakish all-round abilities.

Green has the making sofa oncein-a-generation phenomenon who can transform Australian cricket.

The 21-year-old averages 50 batting at No.4 for Western Australia, and can open the bowling with 140km/h thunderbol­ts at a towering height of two metres.

But having that rare ability to do it all brings with it a persistent pressure to be superman.

Watson has urged selectors to unleash him against India this summer, but hopes Green can be shielded from the ruthless spotlight he experience­d as a Test all-rounder.

“He’s got all the tools as a young guy to be an incredible all-rounder. From his batting alone, he looks like he’ s ready togo ,” Watson said.

“It’s not easy, but there’s a way to be able to manage some of his incredible skill, to be able to draw the best out of him.

“There’ s never that many allrounder­s that come through in Australian cricket, or world cricket, because it’ s challengin­g, and that expectatio­n is always going to be there.

“I just hope the Australian public and the media and the expectatio­ns around are just a bit kinder and gentle, because there’ s no reason why someone – just because they’re an all-rounder – needs to be exposed more than other people .”

When England all-rounder Ben Stokes broke Australian hearts with his clutch match-winning innings in last year’s Ashes, Green was completely oblivious.

“I actually hopped on a plane home from India when England were nine down and needed like 80 to win and I was chilling,” Green said. “Then I landed in Singapore and saw we’d lost, and I was like, ‘you’ ve got to be kidding me ’.”

Green might not have seen Stokes’ heroics, but there is a feeling he has it in him to replicate those feats for an Australian side that has waited 65 years for the second coming of Keith Miller.

A teammate at WA of another heavily criticised all-rounder in Mitchell Marsh, and a student of Watson’s career, Green is fully aware of what he’ s up against.

“Their records are not that bad given how much negativity they cop,” Green said.

“There’s a bit of a thought with all-rounders that if you don’t perform with the bat you can catch up with the ball, but the Australian public don’t really see that.

“I think Mitch said it really well a couple of years ago when he said they really just demand good results with bat and ball at all times .”

The fact not even WA bowling coach Matt Mason can say whether Green’s strongest suit is with the bat or ball suggests this kid is capable of clearing the jump, no matter how high the bar might be set.

“I watch him bowl and you can just see the game changes,” Mason said. “Then you watch him bat and he nearly scored 200 the other day. He just does not want to get out, ever.”

The fact Green is 3cm taller than Mitchell Starc is a scary prospect. Just ask selector George Bailey, who was down the other end when the West Australian made his Sheffield Shield debut with a five-wicket haul in February 2017.

“His first-ever over in first-class cricket was as good as I’ve ever seen,” WA teammate Andrew Tye said.

“He had George playing and missing five out of the six balls .”

But amid all the hype around Green, physical comparison­s to St arc don’ t seem as pertinent as WA Cricket Associatio­n CEO Christina Matthews’ assessment of his demean our and character.

“He reminds me quite a bit of Josh Haz le wood. Unpretenti­ous and just a really happy-go-lucky sort of bloke ,” Matthews said.

“I think the key to his success is going to be the fact he doesn’t appear to get sucked into all the talk about him.”

Australia’s No.1 superstar Steve Smith has been in a bubble in the IPL for the past two months, but even he can feel the excitement.

“I had the one Shield game against him at the SCG,” said Smith. “The short time he was out there facing Starcy, Cummins and Hazlewood, it looked like he had a lot of time, which as a batsman – time is huge.”

Mason feared Green was falling out of love with bowling earlier this year after the latest in a long run of back stress fractures.

Unlike most injured quicks, Green still held his place in the WA team on batting alone, and has slowly rebuilt his action to the point Mason believes a massive Test de but against the might of India this summer is not too much to ask.

“As a batter, absolutely not. As a bowler, with the right care around him in terms of expectatio­ns of overs, I think he could play a role,”

Mason said. “But wins and losses matter at the internatio­nal level, so it’ s going to be the ability of the power s-that-be to keep control of what he does while trying to win a Test match. That’s always going to be a tricky balance.”

For that reason, Australian great Mike Hussey, who played his career alongside an injury-plagued Watson, has urged for calm heads to prevail.

“We just need to be patient. Pick him when he’s ready to go rather than picking him when he’s not quite ready ,” H us sey said.

“We don’t want to ruin the kid mentally before he even starts .”

 ?? Pictures: GETTY ?? Western Australia’s Cameron Green is a rare breed of cricketer — as dangerous with ball in hand as he is with the bat.
Pictures: GETTY Western Australia’s Cameron Green is a rare breed of cricketer — as dangerous with ball in hand as he is with the bat.

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