Warner quashes Test retirement talk as India, Ashes await

Warner has been told by selection panel chair George Bailey and national men’s team coach Andrew McDonald they want him opening the batting next year during the Border-Gavaskar series as well as the Ashes.

Published : Dec 30, 2022 10:47 IST , MELBOURNE

Australia has only won a Test series in India once since 1969, and hasn’t won a series outright in England since 2001. David Warner has his sights set on course correction.
Australia has only won a Test series in India once since 1969, and hasn’t won a series outright in England since 2001. David Warner has his sights set on course correction. | Photo Credit: AFP
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Australia has only won a Test series in India once since 1969, and hasn’t won a series outright in England since 2001. David Warner has his sights set on course correction. | Photo Credit: AFP

A rejuvenated David Warner said he has “parked” the acrimony over his permanent leadership ban and is focused on helping Australia take series wins in India and the Ashes next year.

Opener Warner shrugged off a lean run with a double-century in the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne against South Africa, driving the host to a thumping innings and 182-run win that sealed the series 2-0.

Warner’s home summer had been clouded by his bid to lift his leadership ban from the Newlands ball-tampering scandal four years ago.

He recently dropped that bid, saying he did not want his team mates or his family further disrupted by a “public trial” into the events during the 2018 tour of South Africa.

Warner said the review process set up by Cricket Australia to seek relief from the ban had not helped his game, but he was glad to have moved on from it.

“These are things that you don’t want on your mind when you’re going to training or you’re going to the game, so for me it was just trying to get the right frame of mind, and I just couldn’t,” he told reporters at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

“That’s all parked now. I don’t have to worry about that. Not even thinking about it.

“(The) focus is now towards Sydney and getting myself right for the BBL (Big Bash League).”

There was media speculation this month that the New Year’s Test in Sydney against South Africa might be the 36-year-old’s last in whites.

However, Warner said he was hungry for more success in the tour of India starting in February and the Ashes in the English summer.

“I think the extra motivation for me is winning in India and completely winning a series in England,” he said.

“I’ve been told by the coach and the selectors they’d like me to be there.

“I still know what energy I can bring to the team.

“I think once I’ve started losing that spark and energy around training and, you know, taking the mickey out of people, playing some jokes here and there ... I think that’s when I probably know it’s time.”

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