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January 1, 2013
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Players/Officials:
Usman Khawaja
| Darren Lehmann
Teams:
Australia
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Usman Khawaja's increased work ethic and new, more aggressive style will hold him in good stead if he is given an extended run in Test cricket, according to his state coach Darren Lehmann. Khawaja is on standby for Australia's captain Michael Clarke for the third Test against Sri Lanka in Sydney but even if he does not play in that match, he has a strong chance of being installed as the replacement for the retiring Michael Hussey for the upcoming tour of India.
Khawaja, 26, has played six Tests but was dropped last summer and told he needed to work on several aspects of his all-round game, including his fielding and ensuring he rotated the strike while at the crease. His off-season move from New South Wales to Queensland allowed Khawaja to work with Lehmann, a respected coach who has aimed to instil an attacking mindset into his charges over his two seasons at the helm.
"I've been really impressed, he has adapted to a new aggressive style of play that we're really big on in Queensland," Lehmann told ESPNcricinfo of Khawaja's approach this season. "He's adjusted to that really well. We're really impressed with what he's doing and how he's gone about it.
"Technically there weren't too many changes, it was more a mindset with him and getting him to be really aggressive and positive in what he's doing. He's taken that on board. He has improved his fielding, he has improved his work ethic off the ground and we're really pleased for him."
Although Khawaja is not locked in as Hussey's replacement, it is expected he will at the very least be part of Australia's touring squads to India and England this year. In his Test appearances so far, Khawaja has shown promise without posting a big score - he has made 263 runs at 29.22 with only one half-century from 11 innings - and Lehmann said if he was given an extended run in the side it would do his confidence a world of good.
"If he gets a good run at it, that's what you want," Lehmann said. "If he can get that run and he doesn't have that fear of getting dropped straight away, he'll do well. We're pretty confident with where he's at and where he's going. He's a good kid and he's worked really hard to get where he wants to get to."
However, the one area of Khawaja's game that he still needs to improve is his conversion rate of half-centuries to hundreds. During his 2012 count season with Derbyshire, Khawaja passed fifty on seven occasions but only once did he go on to triple figures. For Queensland this summer, Khawaja has managed three half-centuries and one hundred from 11 first-class innings.
"He does have to get big hundreds," Lehmann said. "He's got four or five fifties for us in Shield cricket and only gone on once to get one hundred. We have spoken about conversion rate and that is a big thing, but he's playing that expansive game now so he has to find the happy medium. He will do that."
The one Shield century Khawaja has scored this season was one of the finest the competition has witnessed in a long time, as he cruised to 138 from 178 deliveries on a green seaming Bellerive Oval pitch that was so difficult that no other batsman from either side managed a half-century. Khawaja's work at No. 3 for the Bulls in that game was the reason they were able to complete an innings victory inside three days.
"It was outstanding," Lehmann said. "It was one of the best hundreds I've seen in Shield cricket. I don't think anyone else made fifty runs. It was really impressive."
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Assistant Editor Possibly the only person to win a headline-writing award for a title with the word "heifers" in it, Brydon decided agricultural journalism wasn't for him when he took up his position with ESPNcricinfo in Melbourne. His cricketing career peaked with an unbeaten 85 in the seconds for a small team in rural Victoria on a day when they could not scrounge up 11 players and Brydon, tragically, ran out of partners to help him reach his century. He is also a compulsive TV game-show contestant and has appeared on half a dozen shows in Australia.
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he is the perfect replacement for the great mike hussey. he is all class, all temperament, all focus and scores in difficult conditions and circumstances not to mention he is a great team man. sound familiar? not to mention he is always improving and guys like him, warner and hughes will be entering their prime very soon. exciting times
Khawaja should be a good player in the long term. Aust. shouldn't lose too much with him effectively replacing Hussey. He'll need to up his game a few notches, which I think he can do. However those talking about technique to justify selection are using strange logic. It doesn't matter what your technique is: score runs and you are good. Simple. Quiney looked very correct as he edged those balls to the keeper in his last game, getting a pair. There are a lot of unanswered questions with guys like Khawaja, Hughes, Warner etc, but they also have huge potential in my opinion. So why there is so much negativity around about the future of the Aust. team is beyond me. Personally, I'm excited! Anybody would think they have been getting thumped, and now 6 players had left. In fact they have been winning about 4 times as much as losing these past two seasons, and only two have gone, and one of those wasn't scoring any runs (Ponting). It's hardly the end of the world, just a minor adjustment.
Boof has been tremendous with Khawaja this year. @Eagle8 very well said. Khawaja is the future of our batting lineup. Khawaja has the most pure technique among the younger batsman as pointed out by Border, Taylor and Inevarity himself. Both Hughes and Khawaja have earned their spots but the issue here is the mistreatment of Khawaja which can't go on forever. He should play the SCG test. And with regards his fielding boof has improved his fielding tremendously this year and he has been snaring some tough chances in slips and covers. Watch some big bash or Ryobi games mate.@Mamboman take some time to watch his innings, i saw his 100 against tasmania this year on a deck where he got 138 and Tasmania got 90 and 130.@Doosra Inventor Khawaja came to Australia when he was 3 years old, Imran Tahir came to Australia in his 20s hardly worth comparing, Khawaja is a product of our system here in Australia.
Usman Khawaja is the most technically correct batsman in Australian sheild right now, this guy needs to be given constant run just what lehmann said..he truly is the future of Aussie cricket
Ian Jones - Got no issue with foreign born players playing for Australia. The contentious issue is players who learned all there cricketing skills at another country (I forgive the Hick and Wessels as they had no country to represent at the time), but K Peterson, J Trott, D Pattinson, Mullally, A Hollioake, B Hollioake, G Jones to name a few all learned there cricket away from England. The likes of Strauss who played considerable cricket for England at a young age is ok too.
Posted byHenrik, you make valid points but you need to put Phil Hughes in the Hick and Ramps category not just Khawaja!! Hughes's technique is dreadful and has been found out.
Posted byThe Aussies love whingeing about South African born players playing for England. How are you going to react with a Pakistani born cricketer playing for Australia? Or for that matter how did you react when other foreign born players played for you? Symonds, Wessles, etc?
Posted by Edwards_Anderson on (January 2, 2013, 11:52 GMT)@Barnsey444 let me correct you, Khawaja was shield player of the year in 2010 and won the Bradman medal in that year which is why he made his debut. The year before he averaged 66 and was again picked in the shield team of the year. He has been in the shield teams of the year for 2009 and 2010 but missed out last year due to being dropped unfairly. What stands him apart are where he got his runs, on absolute green decks where the other teams struggled to match his individual scores, 140 against Tasmania when they got 90, 2 half centuries against NSW when they only got 150 and a 90 odd against South Australia on a green gabba deck on his debut for the Bulls, may i say more or do you need more convincing.
Posted by davidpk on (January 2, 2013, 10:50 GMT)mamboman at least the guys a proper test batter whos had to sit out while sloggers get the chance for test baggy green.
Posted by davidpk on (January 2, 2013, 10:47 GMT)the pakistani born khawaja will do another sound job he had to come into the picture soon. i thought they would have picked another T20 batter to match warner and hughes good luck to the guy