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Marsh has a route to the Ashes; Khawaja backs Renshaw

Australia's T20I captain has a series against India starting on Wednesday but could return to Shield cricket after that

Andrew McGlashan
Andrew McGlashan
27-Oct-2025 • 3 hrs ago
The door remains open for Mitchell Marsh to return to Test cricket in the Ashes, with Australia head coach Andrew McDonald saying he's batting "as well as he has for a long period of time", while Usman Khawaja has endorsed his Queensland team-mate Matt Renshaw as the best option to partner him in the first Test.
Speaking ahead of the T20I series against India but with much of the focus on the Ashes, McDonald said the selection panel would be confident picking a player out of white-ball cricket to face England, but added there could be a window for Marsh to return to the Sheffield Shield when it overlaps with the first two Tests.
McDonald's view is consistent with what was first stated back in April when the chair of selectors said Marsh's Test career wasn't over after his axing against India in January. In recent weeks the notion of a recall has gained traction amid Marsh's impressive ODI and T20I form, which has brought 555 runs in his last ten innings.
"We would be comfortable picking someone, and if you want to put a name to it, Mitch Marsh, out of white-ball cricket, if we felt like that was going to benefit the Test team," McDonald said. "He's the captain of the white-ball team. It's very hard for him to vacate and balance out Test preparation, if he was to be in the window for that.
"We feel he's batting as well as he has for a long period of time. And when he got dropped last summer, I think he was one of our highest averages from Headingley [in the 2023 Ashes] to that point. He hit a bit of a flat patch there, and we felt it best at that time to bring Beau Webster in."
Marsh, Australia's T20I captain and stand-in ODI leader, has played down the prospects of a Test return with varying degrees of humour over the past month, starting with a simple "no" in New Zealand when asked if he was thinking about to, to saying he'll be "six beers deep" by lunch on day one having got tickets for the opening Test.
"We still haven't given up on Mitch Marsh's Test career," McDonald said. "So what would the prep look like for him? It would have to be through white ball or maybe some Shield cricket after white ball if he isn't in that first squad and then [he] he can press his claim through that.
"There's Shield [rounds] five and six also when we're playing the Test matches, where players that aren't in the first Test will obviously go to work then."
Western Australia play a day-night game against South Australia from November 22 and then face Victoria in the final round before the Big Bash break. Marsh played two Shield games last season before the India series, where he was then dropped after six single-figure scores in seven innings.
It's unlikely Marsh would be an all-round option, having shelved his bowling and not done any since late last year against India.
Meanwhile, Khawaja believes that Renshaw is ready to return to Test cricket as the selectors ponder over who will open in Perth. Sam Konstas is the incumbent alongside Khawaja, having done the job in the West Indies but has just one fifty in four Shield innings so far this season after his lean returns in the Caribbean.
Marnus Labuschagne could yet take the role if both Cameron Green and Webster make the XI but Khawaja would prefer him to return at No. 3.
"I think our best line-up has Marnus three, [Steve] Smith four and [Travis] Head five," he said ahead of Queensland's match against New South Wales at the Gabba. "I know if Renshaw is picked, that he is in the best space right now to have a crack at Australia again and be ready to score runs. Obviously, I am a little bit biased because he is my opening partner and a friend of mine, but he's been there and done it. He has scored 184 for Australia.
"He hasn't done himself any harm with the way he has played in the last three matches in the one-dayers [against India]. He has taken the pressure on really well and looked the part, which he always does whenever he goes to the next level. You feel like he is one guy that really belongs at the next level."

Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo