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The decision to make Matthew Wade Australia's first-choice wicketkeeper in the shorter formats could have ramifications for Brad Haddin's Test career as well
February 20, 2012
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Players/Officials:
Brad Haddin
| Matthew Wade
Series/Tournaments:
Australia tour of West Indies
| Commonwealth Bank Series
Teams:
Australia
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As John Inverarity answered questions about Australia's one-day squad selections on Monday, two things became clear. One was that Ricky Ponting has played his last one-day international, but that his Test future remains in his own hands. The second was that Brad Haddin faces a serious challenge to play for Australia again in any format.
Two wicketkeepers will be chosen for the one-day and Test tour of the West Indies in March and April. The selectors have confirmed that those two men will be Haddin and Matthew Wade, barring unforeseen circumstances. They have also declared that Wade will be the first-choice gloveman in T20 and one-day international cricket from now on.
They have not made a similarly categorical statement about the Test position. And that's where Haddin's future becomes clouded. The limited-overs games in the Caribbean come before the Tests. Wade has a wonderful chance to impress in seven matches before the five-day contests begin. It is possible he will debut in the first Test in Barbados.
In the meantime, Haddin has no choice but to find form for New South Wales in their final two Sheffield Shield matches of the season. Even that is not without its complications, as the promising young gloveman Peter Nevill will push Haddin for a place in the state side. After that, he'll have nothing but a three-day tour match in the West Indies in which to argue his case.
If the Test side was picked today, it would hard to leave Wade out. He is in form in all formats. He hasn't had the chance to play a first-class match since early December, but in his five first-class outings this summer he has averaged 61.50. In his initial ODIs he has batted with maturity, he has been agile behind the stumps and his enthusiasm and energy has been unmistakable.
Meanwhile, Haddin has just made a pair in a Sheffield Shield match in Perth, and had an indifferent Test series against India with both bat and gloves. He dropped catches and made no runs of consequence. He appeared uncertain and listless. There didn't seem to be any real drive. It was easy to overlook in a series dominated by Australia, but it is hard to imagine he offered more than Wade would have.
And so, the selectors wanted to see what Wade could offer in the tri-series that followed. They have been impressed with what they have seen. Initially, there was confusion over whether Haddin had been rested or dropped. In announcing the squad for this week's matches, Inverarity tried to clarify the selection process at the start of the Commonwealth Bank Series.
"When we sat down to select the side, which was the 29th or 30th of January, the exact situation is this: we had selected Matthew Wade to be the keeper in the T20 side," Inverarity said. "We were keen to further develop Matthew Wade and have a look at him. We identified him as the second wicketkeeper in Australia. The NSP has stated constantly that it wants to develop more depth.
"We want to know that we've got more than one keeper of international standard and blooded, ready for the fray in Test match cricket whenever is required. That's what we wanted to do with Matthew Wade. The NSP was also aware that Brad had a fluctuation of form, both with the bat and the gloves but had finished well with the gloves [against India], and it would have done him good to have a break.
"All of that [was] common sense, and we also decided then that Brad would remain in contention and that we'd give Matthew the first three games and probably the five games, and then we would reconsider ... When I said he was rested, that was probably incomplete. I made an error. I should have said what I just said then. To say that he was dropped wasn't quite correct, it was exactly as I said."
To sum up, at first the selectors put Haddin aside and wanted to see what other talent was out there. Now that Wade has impressed them, Haddin has been dropped. It was the right move for a one-day side looking to the future. It was also the best choice based on form alone. Whether that happens in the Test side as well remains to be seen, but Wade is clearly a man with talent and poise. He would not be out of place in the baggy green.
Inverarity hopes the presence of both Wade and Haddin the same touring squad will stir the competitive juices in the two men. Perhaps it will be the spark Haddin needs to snap out of his slump. If he doesn't, Wade is ready to grab his opportunity. As Inverarity said, the selectors want more than one keeper ready for Test cricket.
As they showed by axing Ponting from the ODI squad after a 375-game career, Inverarity's panel can make the difficult decisions. In contrast, dropping a wicketkeeper who has played 43 Tests wouldn't be that tough a call. It's up to Haddin to make their decision that little bit harder.
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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@zenboomerang - mate talk about hypocrisy - I said at best he will be back next SHIELD summer - you go on to say that "...he isn't looking to play for the Tigers this season..."as stated before, he is completely out of the International picture FOR THE TIME BEING!
Posted by zenboomerang on (February 22 2012, 06:10 AM GMT)@AidanFX... Yes Paine seems to have recovered very well from his surgery & should be back training next week & playing local cricket - he isn't looking to play for the Tigers this season & just wants to get back out onto the paddock... Look out for him in the near future...
Posted by zenboomerang on (February 22 2012, 06:09 AM GMT)@Meety... You do realise that Paine will most likely be playing for his local club University within weeks... lol...
Posted by zenboomerang on (February 22 2012, 06:01 AM GMT)@Meety... Not sure where you get your info on Paine?... Are you following his rehab at present?... The bone replacement surgery was 10 wks ago today - should be completely healed by now... With Paine resumming training next week I find your analysis completely wrong... Please try & put up real facts & not musings :) ...
Posted by sportzkid on (February 21 2012, 07:27 AM GMT)Records and stats tell speak volumes - Haddin is paying for the failure of his teamates. Even when you take his recent drop in form, if you look at his record compared to that of Healey (golgo_85) in tests Haddin averages 36 Vs Healey's 27, in ODI's Haddin averages 31 vs Healey's 21. Wade is new to international cricket - other teams will find weaknesses!!! and he will have to adapt when this happens.
Posted by Meety on (February 21 2012, 01:33 AM GMT)@Busie1979 - I think there is a strong case for Neville to play as a specialist batsmen for the remaining 2 S/Shield games this season. Also D Smith doesn't get a look in very often in the S/Shield & he is of a top standard. @AidanFX - at best - he'll be back next year, at worst retired. Probably won't keep early in the Shield next summer & play as a batsmen. His injury is a bit Watto-ish, ended up being more complicated. For the time being Internationally speaking he is completely out of the picture me thinks! == == == Think that now that Punter is almost definately going to the WIndies, the need for Haddin to play in the tests has diminished. Nothing short of a big century in one of the 2 Shield matches, (+ a good contribution in the 3-day tour match) will save his place.
Posted by rubywaxed on (February 21 2012, 00:49 AM GMT)Haddin is finished and has been for a while,he should not have played this summer had Paine been available. His reflexes are gone and as a consequence he has become hard handed with the gloves and late to go for catches if he goes at all. Wade has now overtaken Paine due to Paine's wretched run with injuries. The question remains will Payne be able to overcome his brittle hands to push for selection again or is the next keeper post Wade yet to be seen in the shield games given Wade is only 24. I agree with Busie 1979 in that Peter Nevill should take over gloves for N.S.W.
Posted byWade hasn't done a lot wrong with the gloves. And can you imagine the benefit of someone like him coming in mid-order in the test team? Say, at 7 after Watto at 6. That's a good, deep, batting lineup. Wade may not be a Gilchrist, but he's as good as we're going to get any time soon.
Posted by unregisteredalien on (February 21 2012, 00:41 AM GMT)Inver & co will make the right call. Highly likely Wade will be first choice in all three formats by the time of the Windies tour. The only way Haddin could prevent that is back-to-back centuries coupled with a marked change in temperament. The odds are against him to say the least.
Posted by smudgeon on (February 20 2012, 23:41 PM GMT)AidanFX, Paine injured his finger in a charity match last year. Apparently the surgery was botched, and it's unlikely he'll be ready until next summer. Poor timing for Tim, I really expected him to be the next keeper. Stilll, Wade has looked pretty good so far. There's been enormous pressure on Haddin over the last 12 months, and while I'm no fan, I feel for the guy - but 43 tests is still a pretty good run, and he'd be an idiot if he wasn't aware that his spot was under scrutiny because of his performance & the performance of people like Wade & Neville. If he tanks in the next two shield matches for the blues, I'm not even sure he'll get that ticket to the West Indies that Inverarity mentioned previously. There's a definite move to building towards the future now (finally!), it feels a little like 1994-1995. The selection panel seem like they're working with a goal & purpose in mind, and that is really reassuring...