Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
The cases of Stephen Waugh, Martyn, Langer, Hayden, Ponting, Lehmann, Katich etc. bear no resemblence whatsoever to Hughes'. Apart from the fact Hughes was picked as a 20-year-old first-choice (most of the aforementioned were a little older, though Stephen Waugh was not, and were picked only as injury cover), he had success. None of the aforementioned did.This policy has served Australia very well over the last two decades and has proven itself to be instrumental in giving Australia the edge in developing cricketers.
Younger or new players are given time in the team and like players before him such as Hayden, Ponting, Langer, Katich and many more Hughes has been dropped from the team after a bad run and not only does this assist in allowing them time to reflect on what is required for them to succeed at test level it brings them back to earth on how tough it is to play international cricket. In the long term Hughes will understand that this is part of the learning process and he will come back better or not at all.
Watson himself has been through this process even though mainly due to injuries but you can see the desire this man has to make an impression and to take any chance he gets and make the most of it.
Hughes needs this reminder to instill a bit of discipline and team first ethic which in the long run will benifit Australia and Hughes. This is not a knee jerk reaction from the Australian selectors but a calculated move to build a team for the future. Australian selectors record is second to none in the international scene and their handling of players has been outstanding.
It makes no sense to pick someone then discard him when he does well. The only reason there've been lots of Australians who've come in for a handful of games then returning for a run much later is because that's the way it's happened, not deliberate policy. If such a policy were ever to be applied, it'd be a stupid one.
The majority of Australian batsmen of late have simply struggled to establish themselves because they've not done well early doors. Those few who have (Mark Waugh, Gilchrist) came in and stayed in.