Brilliant Aussies still worried about future
by Neil Manthorp 15/10/2002, 00:00
Forgive me for writing once again about Australia but I have just enjoyed an unusual holiday with Brisbane as the venue so it is natural that the Waugh brothers' collective lack of form in Sharjah should be on my mind.
Let me say upfront that my holiday was unusual in the sense that a very,
very close friend of mine (also a cricket writer) was married in Brisbane so
I was in the company of several sports journalists and yet I wasn't working.
Strange feeling.
During the week of my acclimatisation period (important to prepare
properly for a wedding, especially when you're one of the speakers) I
settled down with a couple of beers with the Aussies to watch the second
Test againjst Pakistan in Sharjah. Of course, it was all over before we
could order our third XXXX Gold, literally. We only started watching at
lunch on the second day.
Instead of celebrating an extraordinary win, the overwhelming feeling
amongst my 'learned' friends as well as the assorted pub clientelle was that
Pakistan were a joke and the victory therefore meaningless. But worse still,
they reckoned the perfomance once again illustrated just how often the
Australian team relies on the same, few players for their best results.
So many of the best Australian players are heading towards their mid 30s
while the Waugh boys, as everybody keeps reminding them, are 37. Even the
obvious 'next generation' like Jimmy Maher and Simon Katich are in their
late 20s.
When I pointed out that Australia 'A' had just belted South Africa 'A'
5:1 in a one-day series last month, they all scoffed. "Who," they asked,
"were the fast bowlers who stood out in that team as natural replacements
for Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie?"
"Brad Williams?" I ventured. My mates scoffed some more. They were
anything but convinced. "A big, lumbering, injury-prone no-hoper," was the
consensus.
I have noted very little praise or criticism of South Africa's national
selectors for venturing beyound the exclusive clique of 14 or so national
players this season. Perhaps we are all a little shocked to see so many new
names in national colours in so short a space of time.
But I assure you that many Australians are desperate for their selectors
to do the same. "We have a team that could collapse as a unit, barring three
or four players, and there'll be nobody with international experience to
take their place. We're dicing with complete ignominy," my mate said the
night before wedding.
Right or wrong, I thought it provided some interesting perspective on
what Omar Henry and his men are trying to do.
The wedding, incidentally, was truly magnificent.