Scottish Daily Mail

Billings set for debut as hand injury hits Buttler

- by PAUL NEWMAN

Sam Billings is set to be handed an unlikely debut in the final ashes Test and the chance to cement his place in England’s red-ball future.

The Kent captain was yesterday called into England’s ailing squad, with both Ben stokes and Jos Buttler almost certainly out of the rest of this tour and Jonny Bairstow possibly struggling with the thumb injury he suffered in making a century yesterday.

Billings (below), who has been playing under Trevor Bayliss for sydney Thunder in australia’s Big Bash, will now challenge Bairstow and, perhaps, Ollie Pope to take the gloves for a final pink-ball Test that begins in Hobart next Friday.

stokes damaged his side bowling bouncers in the enforcer role on the second day of the fourth Test and was clearly struggling while making a brave 66 in a partnershi­p of 128 with Bairstow yesterday.

There seems little point in stokes staying in australia beyond this Test and he could even be a doubt for England’s next Test assignment, against the West indies in march, with intercosta­l muscle injuries notoriousl­y slow to heal.

Buttler, meanwhile, damaged his hand while keeping during australia’s first innings and seemed to be affected when lobbing Pat Cummins tamely to cover for a duck on the third day.

it is conceivabl­e England’s most gifted white-ball cricketer is playing his final Test despite his protestati­ons ahead of sydney, possibly for contractua­l reasons, that he still wants to play his part in England’s red-ball future.

Buttler has just two hundreds in 57 games and only seven in first-class cricket, his defiance in making 26 off 207 balls in the second Test in adelaide proving a rare highlight in an ashes where he has failed to make a half-century and shown fallibilit­y with the gloves.

Better, surely, for Buttler, at 31, to concentrat­e on white-ball cricket where he is peerless and the natural successor to Eoin morgan when he gives up the captaincy either after the next Twenty20 World Cup in October or next year’s defence of the 50-over crown.

Bairstow’s brilliance yesterday was a reminder he had done little wrong as England’s Test keeper and no7 before former national selector Ed smith led the move to take the gloves away from him and give them to Buttler almost four years ago.

England’s favoured option would be giving those gloves back to Bairstow, at least in the short term, but he admitted yesterday his damaged right thumb, which last night needed an X-ray, might not be strong enough to take on a dual role. Pope kept wicket in a Test for England in an emergency in new Zealand in 2019 and was seen practising with the gloves for the first time on this tour in the nets yesterday. But he must be considered an outsider for the role, not least because he was dropped after the second Test.

How England must wish Ben Foakes, who will surely get another chance to establish himself in the three Tests in the Caribbean, was available now but they sent him home after the lions tour.

That leaves the unfulfille­d figure of Billings who, at 30, has been unlucky not to have played more than 25 one-day internatio­nals and 33 T20s because of injury and the fierce competitio­n for whiteball batting and keeping places.

He could even become a left-field option as the next England Test captain should Joe Root step down or be removed at the end of this ashes.

Billings has captaincy experience — now he might have a chance to prove his credential­s to come from nowhere towards, perhaps, the biggest job in English Test cricket.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom