+
  • HOME»
  • Khawaja urges selectors to pick Warner’s replacement on class, not form

Khawaja urges selectors to pick Warner’s replacement on class, not form

Australia Test batter Usman Khawaja has urged the national selectors to look for class over form when they choose his next opening partner after David Warner quits the longest format next month. Warner is set to play his last Test at his home ground in Sydney against Pakistan in the final game of the three-match […]

Australia Test batter Usman Khawaja has urged the national selectors to look for class over form when they choose his next opening partner after David Warner quits the longest format next month.
Warner is set to play his last Test at his home ground in Sydney against Pakistan in the final game of the three-match series starting January 3.
Khawaja isn’t too concerned about his next partner but has urged the selectors to pick the right player who can flourish and succeed at the international level.
“To be honest, it (who my next opening partner is) doesn’t really matter to me, genuinely. Whoever the selectors are going to pick, they’re going to pick because they think they’re the best for the role,” Khawaja said.
“I don’t even believe in the ‘bat-off’ people are talking about right now. I think it is going to come to a lot more than that. You can’t pick teams based on form.
You’ve got to pick teams based on who you think the best player is.”
“If we pick teams on form, the Australian team would be changing every second week, so you just can’t do that.”
“Class is always permanent. Form is always temporary. It will be interesting to see which way they go.
I actually don’t know,” he added.
Khawaja said his next opening partner shouldn’t be picked on the basis of how many runs he had scored at the first-class level. “I think it (making runs) does play into it,” he said.
“I think it (making runs) does play into it,” he said.
“But I think if you go a bit further back for the last five years, all of the guys that are in contention would have scored a truckload of runs.

Tags:

Advertisement