Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Much of that is due to injury and ill-discipline though.I think the South African selectors did this very well, guys like Amla, Smith, Duminy, Steyn, Prince, Morkel, De Villiers, are very good players and are the core of a very successful side now and that's because their selectors showed faith in them and developed the side around them, in Australia' case Andrew Hilditch comes out after the loss at Melbourne and says chopping and changing isn't going to help and we don't believe in it, when the truth is Australia haven't picked the same XI for as many as the last 15 tests now, so obviously they have failed to implement what they are saying.
If no injuries had happened and form had gone as it has, you'd imagine there'd have been 9 names who'd played every single Australia Test for the last 14 months, and 1 other which experienced just the single name change:
Jaques
Hayden
Ponting
M Hussey
Clarke
Symonds
Gilchrist - Haddin
B Lee
Johnson
Clark
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The only position which would've changed hands would be the fourth bowler's slot - MacGill, Hogg, Tait, Casson, White, Watson, Krejza, Hauritz - they've all had dibs on it. MacGill and Hogg were only ever short-term options; Tait has taken himself out of the equation; and while Casson, White, Krejza and Hauritz are none remotely likely to be long-term options so therefore could all be argued to be bad selections, the clamour for a Bracken (the likeliest player to fill the void with some solidity) hasn't exactly been deafening.
And unfortunately, problems with unavailability have come when Australia can least afford them. Hayden got injured in 2008, that meant first Rogers then Katich came in (then Jaques was dropped after Hayden returned, which is entirely selectorial error). Clarke missed 1 Test due to family bereavements and was replaced by Hodge. Then Symonds had his brainfade and Watson came in. Then Clark's elbow got worse and Siddle replaced him. Now Brett Lee and Symonds (and Symonds' first-up choice as replacement, Watson) get injured and it's Bollinger and McDonald.
As I've said so many times, though, you can't make bad players into good ones by planning. If a player isn't ready or isn't good enough, there's not a lot you can do about it. Had there not been so many players falling unfit of late, the problems would not be so acute now as they are.The more disappointing thing is that Aussie selectors knew all along that most Aussie players who have retired recently all fall in the same age-group, so they were bound to know it, that they may all retire in pretty close span of time, and therefore they should have had their prospective replacements ready to come in and replace their predecessors, but there too there has been a clear lack of planning which is clearly evident now.