Daily News

Best of a bad lot, say Australian media

- CRICKET

SYDNEY: The recall of two 35-yearold veterans for the Ashes series against England shows the lack of quality coming through the Australian ranks, with the squad the “best of a bad lot”, media said today.

Selectors picked Brad Haddin and Chris Rogers, with five openers among seven specialist batsmen alongside just one spinner, Nathan Lyon, for the five-match series starting in Nottingham on July 10.

Given the sorry state of Australian cricket following an ignominiou­s 4-0 Test series drubbing in India last month, pundits bemoaned the lack of options.

“The resurrecti­on of previously discarded veterans Brad Haddin and Chris Rogers for the Ashes has merely confirmed the soft underbelly of Australian cricket,” said Sydney Daily Telegraph cricket writer Malcolm Conn.

“That the selectors were forced back to the future for a 16-man touring party is a poke in the eye of every batsman in state cricket who fancies himself as a future Test player.

“Given that Haddin and oneTest wonder Rogers are both 35, and Ricky Ponting was Sheffield Shield player of the year aged 38, Australia is in danger of losing a generation when it can least afford it.”

The Australian newspaper columnist Patrick Smith said the Ashes squad was the “best of a bad lot”.

“The essential question that needs to be asked is: can we make that Test squad bound for England any better by fiddling with the work of ( chairman of selectors) John Inverarity and his mates? The summer gone has us fretting,” Smith wrote.

“If there are no obvious places that need to be overhauled or even evitably will be derided as the worst Australian outfit to visit England”.

“What is beyond dispute is that no Australian team since 1989 has travelled to England surrounded by such low expectatio­ns,” she added, referring to the 1989 Allan Borderled team that confounded expectatio­ns and thumped England.

Experience­d ABC radio commentato­r Jim Maxwell rated Australia’s chances of winning the Ashes at 50-50.

“England’s performanc­e in New Zealand would make you think they are a bit vulnerable, but certainly Australia has to improve massively on its very poor showing in India if it’s to regain the Ashes.

“But I will be optimistic and say 50/50 at this distance. Australia has got a lot of good fast bowlers and that is the key to this team doing well – it has tremendous strike power.” – Sapa-AFP

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