Posting my lineup up now because it's not 2am
1. Jamie Cox
2. Dene Hills
3. Ken McEwan
4. Jamie Siddons
5. Kevin McKenzie
6. Emrys Davies (5)
7. Wade Seccombe +
8. Bart King (1)
9. Tony Nicholson (3)
10. George Dennett (4)
11. Jack Bannister (2)
Cox & Hills make up a very solid opening pairing, having done so for Tasmania with success throughout the 90's. Cox was the better of the two (and also played overseas to make sure that he got hyped), but Hills was pretty under-rated and both could have played Test cricket for another country.
My middle order is made up of two guys who probably would've been mainstays in the South African Test lineup thoughout the 80's if they were playing Tests at the time and another who is arguably the best non-Test batsman of all-time. In fact if you ask who was the best batsman to not play Tests, Siddons and McEwan's names would come up a lot.
Davies comes in at 6, the Welsh Wilfred Rhodes it seems. Seriously, he started his career as a specialist slow-left armer but became an opener in due course. Put him at 6 because I like to kill two birds with one stone
Seccombe as the keeper, lots of people talk about Berry as unlucky keepers in that era, but Seccombe was also a very good keeper and probably a better batsman. He made the Australian squad a few times in his career, but Gilchrist never wavered.
The star of my bowling is Bart King. Perhaps the best Associate cricketer of all-time, and probably in the Top 3 non-Test bowlers of all-time, he is the star spearhead for my side. Dennett was also very well-regarded and unlucky to not play for England - he took the second most wickets at FC level out of bowlers who never played Tests. Bannister is more famous for his off-field work (i.e. was a commentator post-cricket, and also set up the PCA), but he was a quality bowler in his own right, and in a weaker era may well have played Tests. Ditto Tony Nicholson, who averaged under 20, and actually made an international tour but had to pull out due to injury.