Clicky
Sports, Cricket

Khawaja, Marsh miss out on Aussie contracts


Bangladeshpost
Published : 30 Apr 2020 07:29 PM | Updated : 06 Sep 2020 11:27 PM

Top order batsman Usman Khawaja has been omitted from Australia’s annual list of 20 elite, contracted players in 2020 after falling out of favour with selectors midway through last year’s Ashes, reports Reuters.

The 33-year-old lefthander has not played for the test side since being dropped after the third test against England in Leeds last August.

Khawaja is among a slew of 2019-contracted players to miss out on new deals including fellow batsmen Peter Handscomb, Marcus Harris and Shaun Marsh, fast bowler Nathan Coulter-Nile and all-rounder Marcus Stoinis.

In their place, Marnus Labuschagne, Ashton Agar, Joe Burns, Mitchell Marsh, Kane Richardson and Matthew Wade have all been rewarded.

“Marnus’s rise has been meteoric and well-documented, Joe has been a good test match player, Ashton Agar’s form in T20 internationals has been exceptional, while Kane Richardson has been outstanding in the 20-over and one-day games,” selector Trevor Hohns said in a statement on Thursday.

“Matthew Wade’s summer showed he is not only a tough but a good test player for us. “His form extended into white ball cricket late in the summer, earning him well deserved call-ups to the one-day and T20 Australian squads.”

Players not included on the initial list of contracts can earn one later in the season by accruing 12 “upgrade points” through national team appearances, with five points for a test match, two for a one-day international and one for a T20 international.

All-rounder Annabel Sutherland, the teenage daughter of Cricket Australia’s long-serving former CEO James Sutherland, earned one of the 15 national women’s contracts for the first time. 

The 18-year-old, also the younger sister of Victoria all-round talent Will Sutherland, was among three new faces on the list with fast bowler Tayla Vlaeminck and South Australian all-rounder Tahlia McGrath. 

The contract lists were released a month behind schedule as governing body Cricket Australia scrambles to shore up its finances amid a global sports shutdown due to the coronavirus.