The Gold Coast Bulletin

READY FOR A TEST OF WILL

OPENER PRIMED FOR SCG DEBUT

- SAM LANDSBERGE­R

David Warner’s old opening partner has given Will Pucovski a crash course on what it is like batting with Test cricket’s most destructiv­e force. “The one thing about batting with Davey is it can be a little bit intimidati­ng at times,” Chris Rogers, who opened with Warner in most of his 25 Test matches, told Pucovski.

“Because you can look up at the scoreboard and he’s on 40 and you’re on five.

“It’s about changing it so that you see that as a positive, in that he’s taken the pressure off you and you don’t have to worry about the scoreboard and you can lock in a little bit.

“And whatever people might think about Davey, when he’s out in the middle he’s actually really good to bat with.

“He’s got a lot of good thoughts and he’s very supportive.

“I think he’ll be good for Will, too, because he won’t take it too seriously and he’ll allow Will to be Will.”

Pucovski will become Australia’s 460th Test player when he receives his baggy green at the SCG on Thursday and forms a newlook combinatio­n with Warner laced with fire and finesse.

Warner commands eyeballs no matter where in the world he is batting. But the spotlight will shift to Pucovski in Sydney, the batting prodigy who Australian­s first expected to lay eyes on two years ago. Instead Kurtis Patterson batted Pucovski out of a Test debut in 2019 with twin tons in a tour match, and then last summer Pucovski maturely removed himself from considerat­ion on mental health grounds.

Then, Pucovski’s ninth concussion knocked him out of calculatio­ns for the first two Tests this summer.

On Monday an independen­t neurologis­t cleared the young Victorian to return, but it was only half the battle.

Rewind two years and Pucovski revealed to mindfulnes­s coach Emma Murray that he wasn’t sure if he wanted to keep playing.

Pucovski’s history of head knocks and mental health battles can be traced back to a mishap at football training when he was 16.

Caught in a sling tackle, Pucovski smacked his head on his best mate’s knee and missed six months of school at Brighton Grammar.

But Pucovski told coach Justin Langer this week that he was ready to face the furnace that is an Indian attack spearheade­d by Jasprit Bumrah.

“The only way to get back on the horse is to get back on the horse,” Langer said this week.

“He’s ultimately the one who has to make the decision.

“He has to have the courage to get back on the horse, and he wants to do that, and that’s a really, really positive sign moving forward.”

Pucovski has given Rogers, Victoria’s Sheffield Shield coach, the same reassuranc­e.

“He will know more than anybody else how he’s feeling and where he’s at,” Rogers said.

“From that point of view he’s the one who makes the call, and from when I’ve spoken to him he seems really positive about playing.

“To hear him be so positive is really reassuring. He’s a pretty resilient character now. He’s been through this a lot.

“There’s those other issues that will always be with him, but in terms of a cricketer you’ll see someone very, very special.”

So, why is there such a buzz about Pucovski?

Well, in under-12s he averaged 280 playing for Hampton United, having been dismissed just once during the season. Pucovski’s record of 650 runs in the under19 championsh­ips eclipsed the

likes of Ricky Ponting, and by the time he was 18 he had his Victorian cap.

Pucovski had more birthdays than dismissals growing up. Two of his three outs in a four-season stretch came in unfortunat­e fashion, caught down leg-side and then run out.

“There were three or four seasons where I got out once. I hated it too much, so I tried to get to my 30 retired as often as I could,” Pucovski said last summer.

“You’re playing under-12s or under14s and it’s just concentrat­ing. A lot of kids drift in and out, so I just tried to concentrat­e for longer than they do.”

Lachie Stevens coached Pucovski at Victoria last season and said he was “one of the great theorists” of the game.

“But the great irony in that is that when he actually plays he does the same thing over and over again and never changes from his plans,” Stevens said. “Whilst he talks about different theories and talks about different ideas, what he does beautifull­y is actually repeat the same skill over and over again in a very simplified fashion, which is what the great players do.

“There’s quite an interestin­g contrast in that.

“Why I think he’s a brilliant young player is because like so many of the great players you actually can’t tell what he’s on when you see him

bat. If you came to a game you wouldn’t be able to tell whether he was on three or 203, because he’s still doing the same things over and over.”

Alex Carey also praised Pucovksi’s patience at the crease.

Flamboyant batsman Glenn Maxwell said it was Pucovski’s very simple technique which set him apart.

Mitchell Starc noted how calm Pucovski was, while Adam Zampa was left scratching his head after bowling to Pucovski in a Shield game.

“He just manipulate­d the field really well, he didn’t look fazed by anything,” Zampa said.

The question, clearly, is how Pucovski will go against the short ball. Will a bumper barrage from

Bumrah scramble that steely resolve?

Onlookers at Pucovski’s back-toback double centuries for Victoria this season don’t think so.

South Australia and Western Australia both banged it in short and watched Pucovski start the season by facing 732 deliveries without getting dismissed. It was an invincible run against a run of short balls as Pucovski plundered 255 not-out against the Redbacks and 202 against the Warriors.

“He knows what’s coming, he’s not silly. He’ll be expecting that,” Rogers said.

Pucovski’s recent concussion occurred on day three of a grade wicket at Drummoyne Oval, and

Stevens said that was worth noting.

“People talk about the short ort ball with Will, but it becomes apparent that he does pick up p the length of the ball quite quickly,” y,” Stevens said. “On the fast and true wickets with bounce and carry he plays the short ball exceptiona­lly well.”

Warner will run the tempo when Australia unveils its new-look combinatio­n in what will be cricket’s version of the odd couple.

A brash-and-bold 34-year-old dynamo who polarises cricket fans and a complex 22-year-old prodigy who is openly vulnerable and incredibly self-aware.

Rogers said Sheffield Shield

bowlers were on edge against Pucovski. “If you speak to the bowlers a lot of them will say he’s the batsman they feel has the most amount of time when they’re facing them,” Rogers said.

Given the time Pucovski has at the crease, it is almost fitting that his Test debut has arrived two years after it was expected. Those that have been fortunatel­y to track Pucovski’s rise are certain of one thing.

He will be worth the wait.

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 ??  ?? Will Pucovski and Tim Paine during Australia’s training session at the SCG on Wednesday. Picture: AFP
Will Pucovski and Tim Paine during Australia’s training session at the SCG on Wednesday. Picture: AFP
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2009

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