After Steven Smith declined to disclose who would open the bowling with Mitchell Starc on Friday’s Test match against England, Brett Lee has urged Australia to hand rookie Brendan Doggett the new ball.
In the Sheffield Shield, Doggett, a fast-medium outswing bowler, has taken a lot of wickets and has typically been deployed as an opening bowler for South Australia. Boland had a strong record as a change bowler in his first 14 Test matches, taking 62 wickets at 16.53, but he also opens the bowling when he plays for Victoria in the Shield.
Smith, who will replace Pat Cummins as captain for the first Test, did not say who will be sharing the new ball with Starc in Perth. On Thursday, he stated, “We’ll see in the morning – or hopefully, maybe two mornings,”
However, Brett Lee, who amassed 310 Test wickets during Australia’s run from 1999 to 2008, recommended that Doggett open the bowling to ease any anxiety before his debut.
“Maybe that’s the best thing for his nerves,” Brett Lee remarked on Thursday during a Fox Cricket event.
“Steve Smith might say, ‘Alright, buddy, you haven’t got time to get the nerves.'” if they lose the toss tomorrow and they have to bowl first. Shape a couple away with the new ball.
It’s not as though he was chosen at random. He has been with the team for a very long period. He has trained alongside the men and has a close personal relationship with them. He has earned that opportunity by working hard and having two consecutive excellent Sheffield Shield seasons.
However, it won’t matter when you go outside tomorrow at 10.20 a.m. All of that effort will now be transformed. Take advantage of the occasion, the pressure, and the anxious energy, and hopefully he will take a lot of wickets.
“The thing with Scott Boland is that he can bowl anywhere: I reckon he’d get the ball to seam off ice, he’s so good.”
Doggett was selected before Michael Neser because of his impressive performance during Australia’s training sessions at Perth Stadium this week, according to Smith: “He gets the ball down at nice pace, stands the seam up,” he added. “Hopefully, he can get the ball in the locations we know he can anytime we bowl. I have no doubt that he will create a lot of opportunities if he does that.
Lee thinks that fast bowlers will be rewarded for their “patience” over the course of the five days, which will encourage them to settle into a longer length than usual because of the added carry. Curator Isaac McDonald has guaranteed a pitch with “pace and bounce” for the first-ever Ashes Test at the site.
“You’ve got to bowl a lot fuller, that five-metre length, over here in Perth,” he stated. When the ball swings through [to the keeper], teams who get excited usually lose because nothing hits the stumps. If the wicket is quite bouncy, aim for the top of off, which implies a bit fuller.
“You can attack while remaining patient, but they must attack. To strike the top of off stump, you must change your length, which introduces the slips. If there is pace, a lot of catches will pass through the slips area. As a bowler, I want the ball to go behind to the keeper, first or second slip, or gully in order to get a wicket and be dismissed.






