Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Conditions?Warne was a good selection, he didn't have good domestic performance. Neither did Trescothick or Vaughan really. The problem with us judging selections using your criteria is that we don't have the whole picture. What might look like a bad selection to us because of domestic performance could be an inspired choice from the selectors because they've taken into account temperament/ambition/conditions etc.
Temperament and ambition, and the like, are indeed important. But without skill, none are of the slightest use. It's a selector's job to assess those factors that are not always immediately obvious to the public and marry them to those that are.
Warne when first picked was a bad selection - he did not, yet, have the skill. Vaughan was actually very similar. They were both going to go on and acquire the skill, and were both going to go on and become Test-standard players at a time after their initial Test selection. The mistake that's often made, as I've said already this thread, is that people assume that had they not been picked when they first were that they'd never have been picked at all. This isn't true - Warne and Vaughan were both class players who would have eventually earned their selection, had it not been gifted to them prematurely.
A good selector would have simply waited for the potential that they could observe in a Warne or Vaughan to start coming to fruition, then picked them for Tests. These would have been good selections - and had they come to pass it's very conceivable that Warne and Vaughan would have started to perform in Test cricket much earlier in their careers than they did.
As for Trescothick, well there's really no point me discussing him with virtually anyone, because no-one ever accepts that he is a relatively poor-quality batsman who just got lucky with let-offs at Test level.