Cricket-Six and out: Boland resigned to making way for Hazlewood
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[December 30, 2021] By
Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - A sensational six-wicket innings haul on debut
may not be enough to keep paceman Scott Boland in the Australian
team, with regular seamer Josh Hazlewood set to return from a side
strain for the fourth Ashes test in Sydney next week.
Boland, who was plucked from obscurity by selectors on Christmas
Eve, was Man of the Match in the third test in Melbourne after
finishing with astonishing figures of 6-7 from four overs as England
capitulated for 68 in the second innings.
Selectors are blessed with an embarrassment of bowling riches, with
first-choice seamer Hazlewood expected to be fit and Mitchell Starc
unlikely to be rested after Australia's bowlers had a light workload
at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, where they romped to an innings and
14-run victory.
Boland said he knows where he stands in the pecking order.
“I understand how selection works. I’m 32 so I’ve been around the
block in terms of what happens with those things,” he told host
broadcaster Seven Network.
"When you’ve got a guy like Josh Hazlewood coming back in, I don’t
think I’m going to be standing in his way. He’ll be coming straight
back in."
Having waited until his thirties for a debut, Boland might have
another long wait for his second test with captain Pat Cummins,
Starc and Hazlewood being nailed-on selections for years.
Boland became the second Indigenous Australian to play a men's test
with his debut in Melbourne, joining trailblazer and former fast
bowler Jason Gillespie.
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Australia's Scott Boland celebrates with the Mullagh Medal after
winning the match and retaining the Ashes REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Should Boland miss out it would have echoes of
Gillespie's omission from the side after scoring 201 as a
nightwatchman and taking three wickets against Bangladesh in 2006 in
his 71st test.
Gillespie was Man of the Match but did not play another test.
Seamer Jhye Richardson may also be available for selection after he
missed Melbourne with a minor leg strain, having replaced Cummins in
the second test in Adelaide.
With the series sealed 3-0 and the Sydney Cricket Ground pitch
generally conducive to turn, Australia could hand legspinner
Mitchell Swepson a debut in a dual spin attack with regular Nathan
Lyon, which would further cramp space for fast bowlers.
Selectors chairman George Bailey said Australia's depth was a "great
headache".
"We'd love nothing more for (Swepson) to get an opportunity but it
will probably be conditions-dependent," he said.
"Obviously some hard conversations to be had at some stage."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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