Australia’s rookie fast bowlers face South Africa test

With its experienced fast-bowlers rested, Australia might face a few difficulties in surmounting South Africa's challenges in the five-match ODI series that starts in Centurion on Friday.

Published : Sep 29, 2016 11:34 IST , Centurion

Mitchell Marsh, with 38 ODIs, will be one of Australia's most experienced pacers in the five-match ODI series against South Africa.
Mitchell Marsh, with 38 ODIs, will be one of Australia's most experienced pacers in the five-match ODI series against South Africa.
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Mitchell Marsh, with 38 ODIs, will be one of Australia's most experienced pacers in the five-match ODI series against South Africa.

Australia’s fast bowling reserves will be put to the test during a five-match One-Day International series against South Africa starting at Centurion on Friday.

The world’s leading one-day team will be without an entire battery of top-class pace bowlers when it takes on its fourth-ranked challenger.

Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood have been rested, while Nathan Coulter-Nile, James Pattinson, Pat Cummins, James Faulkner and Peter Siddle were ruled out with injuries.

The touring squad has three new fast bowlers in Daniel Worrall, who earned his first cap in Australia’s nine-wicket win against Ireland in Benoni on Tuesday, Chris Tremain and Joe Mennie.

The only experienced seamers in the squad are John Hastings, Scott Boland and all-rounder Mitchell Marsh, who between them have only 73 caps and 80 wickets in ODIs.

A key bowler for Australia could be leg-spinner Adam Zampa, 24, who made his debut in February and has taken 25 wickets in 13 matches, although South Africa’s relatively small grounds and the thin air in Centurion and Johannesburg could challenge his skills.

Australia coach Darren Lehmann said on arrival in Johannesburg last week that it was necessary to rotate the team’s bowling resources with a view to building depth ahead of major Test series and one-day tournaments. He said all 14 members of the squad would get game time during the tour.

Given its lack of experience, the Australian bowlers have reason to be grateful that AB de Villiers, the world’s number one-ranked ODI batsman, will be undergoing elbow surgery that will keep him out of action for both the ODI series and a Test series in Australia in November.

South Africa still has a strong batting line-up led by Quinton de Kock, Hashim Amla and stand-in captain Faf du Plessis.

The South Africans have named an unusually large squad of 16 players and they too will have to juggle their resources, not only to provide opportunities for all their players but to comply with Cricket South Africa’s recently-adopted racial ’targets’ which call for a season’s average of six players of colour, including at least two black African cricketers, in the national team.

There are nine players of colour in the squad, including three black Africans — fast bowler Kagiso Rabada, left-arm spinner Aaron Phangiso and all-rounder Andile Phehlukwayo, who won his first cap in South Africa’s 206-run win over Ireland last Sunday.

The targets will make managing the workload of Rabada, 21, a particular challenge.

Rabada, named South Africa’s cricketer of the year in July, has played in 34 of South Africa’s 38 matches across all formats in the past year and there will be concerns about the risk of burn-out in a rare fast bowling talent.

SQUADS

South Africa: Faf du Plessis (captain), Kyle Abbott, Hashim Amla, Farhaan Behardien, Quinton de Kock (wicket-keeper), JP Duminy, David Miller, Wayne Parnell, Aaron Phangiso, Andile Phehlukwayo, Dwaine Pretorius, Kagiso Rabada, Rilee Rossouw, Tabraiz Shamsi, Dale Steyn, Imran Tahir.

Australia: Steve Smith (captain), George Bailey, Scott Boland, Aaron Finch, John Hastings, Travis Head, Usman Khawaja, Mitchell Marsh, Joe Mennie, Chris Tremain, Matthew Wade (wicket-keeper), David Warner, Daniel Worrall, Adam Zampa.

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