Daily Dispatch

Marsh casualty of Aussies Test flops

- By IAN RANSOM

ROD Marsh has resigned as Australia’s chairman of selectors in the wake of the Test team’s 2-0 series loss to South Africa, having been roundly criticised for some of the panel’s decisions in recent months.

The former Test wicketkeep­er announced a month ago that he would step down in mid-2017 but said yesterday he would vacate the role immediatel­y as the fall-out from Australia’s fifth successive Test defeat continued.

“This is my own decision and no one within Cricket Australia has pressured me,” Marsh said in a media release. “Clearly, though, it is time for some fresh thinking, just as it is for our Test team to welcome some new faces as we build for the future.”

Marsh, along with fellow selectors Mark Waugh, Trevor Hohns and Darren Lehmann, Australia’s head coach, were condemned for a number of selection issues this year.

After two poor Tests on the Sri Lanka tour, the selectors promptly dumped opening batsman Joe Burns and number three Usman Khawaja, despite the pair dominating during the previous home summer.

A disaffecte­d Khawaja publicly slammed the panel as “fickle” for making he and Burns “scapegoats” for the wider team’s struggles during the 3-0 series whitewash.

Frontline bowlers Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood were rested for the recent one-day internatio­nal series away to South Africa and the under-strength Australian squad were whitewashe­d 5-0.

Proteas captain Faf du Plessis said the result gave his team a confidence boost ahead of the Test series and felt the bowlers’ omission was a mistake on Australia’s part.

The selectors were again under the microscope for picking a 12-man squad to cover the first two Tests against South Africa, which was to have remained untouched regardless of the team’s performanc­e in the series-opener in Perth.

Marsh raised eyebrows when he said uncapped paceman Joe Mennie’s inclusion at the expense of the in-form seamer Jackson Bird was down to his superior batting.

After Australia’s 177-run thrashing in Perth, the panel was further embarrasse­d when Waugh publicly assured struggling all-rounder Mitchell Marsh of his spot in the second Test in Hobart but later appeared to row back on the guarantee.

Marsh was dumped and his replacemen­t, uncapped Callum Ferguson, ran himself out for three in the first innings in Hobart and was out for one in the second.

Cricket Australia (CA) said they would hold an extraordin­ary meeting later yesterday to appoint an interim replacemen­t for Marsh.

Former Australia captain Steve Waugh and paceman Jason Gillespie are likely to be among the candidates, having both expressed an interest in succeeding him last month. — Reuters

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