November 23, 2024

Great ‘confused and bewildered’ by Head axing

Renshaw #Renshaw

Former captain Michael Clarke has joined the growing chorus of criticism aimed at Australia’s selectors, over a massive selection gamble for the opening Test against India

Travis Head, the number four ranked batter in the world, averaged a tick over 50 in Test cricket in 2022.

That decision was then made to look awful as the South Australian’s replacement at No.5 in the batting order, Matthew Renshaw, was sent packing for a golden duck.

AS IT HAPPENED: First Test, day one

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“I can’t get my head around why the selectors dropped Travis Head and picked Matt Renshaw,” Clarke said on Sky Sports Radio’s The Big Sports Breakfast.

“I could understand them going Peter Handscomb at number six in front of Renshaw, being a right hander. Handscomb plays spin pretty well, so I can understand that selection.

“Travis Head bowls, his bowling in India would be very handy. I’m so confused and bewildered by that decision.

“If you’re going to do that, if you’re actually not going to pick him for the first Test match when he’s the fourth best batter in the world, what is he doing on the tour?”

After Australia was skittled for 177 in 63 overs, India reached stumps on the first day at 1-77.

Travis Head was the glaring omission out of Australia's XI for the series opener against India © James Elsby/AP Travis Head was the glaring omission out of Australia’s XI for the series opener against India

Captain Rohit Sharma (56 from 69) and nightwatchman Ravichandran Ashwin will resume in the middle on day two, after Australian debutant Todd Murphy removed KL Rahul to grab his maiden Test wicket.

Head pounded 525 runs at the average of 87.5 against the West Indies and South Africa over the Australian summer, but has struggled mightily on the subcontinent, averaging just 21.3 across seven Tests.

Despite Head’s subcontinent failures, Australian great Matthew Hayden was among those stunned by Head’s omission, with the legendary opener admitting he was left “speechless” at the toss.

“I can’t believe it. For me, he was the player of the summer,” Hayden said on Fox Cricket’s coverage.

Ravindra Jadeja ran through Australia's middle order during the second session on day one. © Robert Cianflone via Getty Images Ravindra Jadeja ran through Australia’s middle order during the second session on day one.

“Totally different conditions to Brisbane, I know, but his 90 there was so good. He made it look flat even though it wasn’t. It was a raging green-top.”

Hayden was far from the only Australian Test legend stunned by the call, with ex-captain Steve Waugh equally bemused.

”Hard to believe we can drop the No.4-ranked Test batsman in the world and probably our best batsman in the last 12 months, plus he bowls better than average off spin. Let’s wait and see – maybe the Aussie selectors are genius’s!” Waugh wrote on Instagram.

Australia was pegged back in the first session after winning the toss and electing to bat first, losing both Usman Khawaja and David Warner for 1 in the opening two overs.

Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne briefly embarked on a rebuild mission, before Head’s absence was made even more glaring when Ravindra Jadeja sparked a middle-order collapse in the second session.

Labuschagne was dismissed for 49 and Smith 37, and while Peter Handscomb (31) and Alex Carey (36) combined for a healthy partnership, another clump of wickets tumbled as Jadeja finished with a five-for.

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