The selectors dropped Shaun Marsh from the Australia side yesterday to make way for the return of Usman Khawaja ahead of the second Boxing Day Test against the West Indies in Melbourne.
There was no room for Marsh, who hit his highest Test score of 182 in Australia’s thumping innings and 212 run defeat of the West Indies in the first Test in Hobart.
Pakistan-born Khawaja returns to the Australia side, reclaiming his No. 3 spot after he was sidelined for the past two Tests with hamstring trouble.
Photo: AFP
Khawaja scored 174 and 121 in the first two Tests against New Zealand last month and proved his fitness with an explosive 109 off 70 balls in the Big Bash League Twenty20 series last weekend.
Otherwise it is an unchanged side for today’s Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, where Australia are favored to retain the Frank Worrell trophy against the struggling tourists.
Khawaja’s recovery from injury created a selection showdown between Marsh and opener Joe Burns.
The selectors opted for Burns, valuing continuity at the top of the order, over Marsh’s fantastic form in the first Test.
“That was a big part of it,” skipper Steve Smith said, while confirming he would drop down to No. 4 in the batting order to make way for Khawaja. “Joe’s been playing quite good cricket, he scored a hundred only a couple of Tests ago.”
“They [Burns and David Warner] average 80 as a pair and it’s pretty important to have a good opening stand. They’ve been doing a very good job, so the selectors thought that was the right way to go,” he said.
Burns and Warner already have three partnerships of at least 100 runs and the selectors are also looking ahead to the two-Test tour of New Zealand in February.
“We were always talking about what’s coming up as well,” Smith said. “There were a lot of conversations around it. Shaun’s extremely unlucky to miss out after scoring a brilliant 180 in the last Test match and 49 under a bit of pressure in the Test before that [against New Zealand in Adelaide.]”
Smith, who has been troubled by knee and hip soreness, had an extended hit in the nets yesterday and struggled for fluency.
“The wickets were a little bit tired and it was hard to get a lot of timing, so I was getting a little bit frustrated out there,” Smith said. “I might have a hit indoors in the morning to get a bit of confidence up before play.”
Smith said he is fully fit, with the extended break after the abbreviated three-day first Test allowing him to rest his niggles.
“My knee is probably feeling as good as it’s felt all summer, so that’s all good, and the hip has settled down,” the 26-year-old said. “I’m good to go.”
Uncapped paceman Scott Boland, called into the squad following Nathan Coulter-Nile’s shoulder injury, is to be released to play in the Big Bash League.
Smith, recently crowned Cricketer of the Year, nominated fielding as one area his side needed to improve on after walloping the West Indies in Hobart.
“We can always improve in certain areas,” Smith said. “Our fielding has been quite disappointing this summer, so that’s something that we’ve been working very hard at. We’re just looking to get better every day and make sure that we get ourselves where we want to be — and that’s No. 1 in all three formats.”
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