Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
I know all selections are a gamble, I've said several times that no selector really has a very strong idea of what'll happen when they first pick a player for international cricket, even if they've been averaging 60 for the last 3 years with the best technique you'll ever see. Thus they (ie, selections) should be judged not remotely on what happens to the player after he plays the level he's been selected for, but what merits the selection had going for it before the selection was made. IE, how the player had been doing at the best level available to him at that time.How does the fact they didn't take bundles of wickets in their first couple of Tests make the selection an error?
Conversely, how many bowlers have we seen over the years take a bundle of wickets early on then fall over form-wise and are never heard from again? Does this then make their selection a 'good' one? Alex Tudor took 4 wickets on debut, the Waugh twins two of them. Does this mean his was a genius selection?
Rick Ponting scored 96 in his first Test so it looked like his selection was justified but then he spent the next 5 years in and out of the team as he sometimes looked woefully out of his depth. Was his selection a good or bad one?
Fact is, even with bundles of form behind them, all selections are partially a gamble. You never really do know about the quality of a player until you select them, form at the lower levels is only really a guide.
The poor initial performances were simply a result of the bad selection.