Pacer Starc attacks Australia’s in-out selection policy
Australia paceman Mitchell Starc has shown his frustration over Cricket Australia’s selection policy saying it’s difficult to deliver consistency “when you play one game and you’re dropped’’.
The left-arm quick has been in and out of the Australian side over the past nine months, and during the current Ashes series in England the pattern has continued.
After starting in the first Test he was left out of the second at Lord’s before returning for the third at Old Trafford, only to be sidelined yet again at Durham.
The treatment has clearly upset the 23-year-old fast bowler, who is the second-highest-paid player on Cricket Australia’s books but has been unable to nail down a permanent place in the Test line-up, Fairfax Media reported Monday.
“Yeah, I guess it would be nice to get a few games back to back and get that rhythm,” Starc said.
“But to have a chance at that consistency that everyone talks about —‘you’ve got to be more consistent’ — well, it’s a bit hard when you play one game and you’re dropped.”
Prominent ex-players and the media have regularly criticised Australia’s contentious use of the player rotation policy, particularly for fast bowlers, designed to guard against them breaking down from too much cricket.
Test leg-spin great Shane Warne once said: “When we were number one there weren’t mission statements flying around, but we got the selection process right and the best 11 were selected for every game.”
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