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Schutt praised for response to omission as another selection call awaits

Australia are preparing to face Pakistan in Colombo after their second match was washed out

Andrew McGlashan
Andrew McGlashan
06-Oct-2025 • 4 hrs ago
Megan Schutt has been termed the "ultimate professional" for the way she responded to being left out of Australia's opening ODI World Cup match against New Zealand. She does, however, face a further wait to see if she will be included against Pakistan in Colombo.
Due to the washed-out match against Sri Lanka, it will be a seven-day gap for Australia when they take on Pakistan. Head coach Shelley Nitschke did not confirm whether Schutt would have featured in that abandoned contest after Darcie Brown's pace had been preferred against New Zealand.
Schutt has 10 wickets in nine ODIs against Pakistan although she did go wicketless in the two most recent matches, at home, between the two sides in early 2023. Brown, meanwhile, has five wickets in two outings - figures of 2 for 21 and 3 for 32 in Brisbane - but she was taken for 52 off four overs against New Zealand in the World Cup opener.
"She [Schutt] is obviously the ultimate professional and she took it very well," Nitschke said on Monday. "We sort of looked at the match-ups and the performances coming in, but certainly I understand that Megan's got a big role to play for us moving forward. We'll have another look again at the match-ups and the conditions at Premadasa before we take on Pakistan and see if she's in that right sort of team to best match up to them to hopefully win."
Speaking to ESPNcricinfo prior to the World Cup, Schutt said she had hoped to feature throughout. "I'd like to think my previous performances have kept me in good stead for that," she said. "Obviously if it doesn't work out, I will completely understand the balance of the squad and run drinks as best as I can if I'm not in the XI. But ideally I'd love to be out on the field doing what I do with people that I love. I like to think I've got pretty good awareness to know if that's not going happen but ideally, I'd love to play all the games and get right through."
The other key selection call Australia made for the opening match was preferring Alana King ahead of fellow legspinner Georgia Wareham. The fact there wasn't room for both was because of Sophie Molineux's return to the side which saw her take 3 for 25, including the wicket of Suzie Bates in her first over and the final removal of Izzy Gaze who was flying on 28 off 18 balls alongside a dominant Sophie Devine.
It was Molineux's first international since last December and Nitschke confirmed the left-arm spinner will need to be looked after as she continues to regain strength from knee surgery.
"She [Molineux] was fantastic in that first round," Nitschke said. "To open the bowling first game back and return figures like she did was unbelievable and a credit to her and the work she's done to get her back to being available to play for us.
"I think her knee is just ongoing management and seeing how it responds to training and games and looking at her availability from there. We'll make sure that we're doing the right thing by her and hopefully having her available when we need her."
When a decision needs to be made between King and Wareham, Nitschke said "sometimes it's actually not about one or the other, like they bring different things to the table. I think Alana probably spins the ball a bit more and she's a bit more attacking. Georgia can find a really good defensive length and [has] got a few variations that she goes to.
"They both offer different things so it's also about what we think we need in the game. Alana makes things happen, like I said, she's an attacking bowler, as does Wolf [Wareham], but she also plays a lot of T20 and knows how to hit a really good defensive length at times as well."
The match in Colombo on Sunday between India and Pakistan saw play suspended for 15 minutes while the ground was fumigated against flying insects. It's a problem Australia have not experienced during their training sessions in the city.
"I'm not sure if that's relative to the conditions and the bit of moisture that's around," Nitschke said. "But hopefully the fumigators are out and ready to go if that's the case."

Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo