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MacGill
hopeful of Windies Test place after 9-wicket romp
SYDNEY—Leg-spinner Stuart MacGill said he has done enough to be
considered to play in Australia’s first cricket Test against the West
Indies in Brisbane next month.
MacGill’s nine wickets in Australia’s thumping win over the World
all-stars here earlier this week are pressuring selectors to keep him in
a leg-spin tandem with Shane Warne for the Brisbane Test starting on
November 3.
MacGill, after being spurned for the recent Ashes series in England,
captured 4-39 and 5-43 on his favourite Sydney Cricket Ground track,
outshining even leg-spin king Warne (3-23 and 3-48).
MacGill, 34, now has 169 wickets at 27.76 from 34 Tests, at a rate of
just under five wickets a match.
“I deserve my place at the top of the heap of next-placed players,
because I’ve done everything that I possibly can to make sure I’m
consistently up there,” MacGill said Friday.
“Following up from a great season in Sheffield Shield cricket last year,
to have a good hit-out in my first Test match this year, I think I’ve
put a pretty strong case”.
Asked by reporters what he had to do to press his Test claims, MacGill
said: “I don’t think I have to do anything else to tell you the truth.
“I think the most important thing to do when you are a peripheral player
is to make sure that if the selection panel is looking for options then
you are at the top of the list.
“If the current Australian selectors are looking for a second spin
bowler, to be part of a five-man bowling line up, I’m it at the moment.
“There’s nobody really who can contest that spot. Fortunately I played
last week and was able to reinforce my place at the top of my list, but
that’s the only thing I can do and I’m confident that I’ve done enough
in that respect”.
The emergence of all-rounder Shane Watson as a potential third paceman
has given MacGill reason to believe he has a better chance of playing
more Tests than in previous years when his opportunities were confined
to just the SCG Test or when Shane Warne was injured.
“Over the last few years, realistically speaking it’s just been a little
bit tough to fit me into a team, perhaps with Shane Watson doing so well
in the one-day series and making it increasingly likely that I get a
game, I can smile a bit more often this summer,” MacGill said.—Agencies |