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Travis Head: future Australian Test captain?

Firebreaker

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I think Travis Head should be given International debut for Australia.He has shown enough exposure in Australian domestic and I think he should be drafted in Australia's LOI squads.He already has a 200 in LA and today he scored a ton in T20 against a good bowling attack
 
I think Travis Head should be given International debut for Australia.He has shown enough exposure in Australian domestic and I think he should be drafted in Australia's LOI squads.He already has a 200 in LA and today he scored a ton in T20 against a good bowling attack

Highest score in ten innings before this was 30.
 
Yet another thread where fb thinks "player x" should be in a specific team.

I'm off to look at wiki and cricinfo to check the stats of players and then come back here and open a thread about that particular player being deserving of a playing XI spot.

:)
 
The youngsters like Lynn and Head are definitely better T20 batsmen than some of the seniors like Smith, White and Watson but reputation from other formats will keep these guys out.

Head's innings today was nothing short of sensational and he did that when he actually needed to rather than many guys who explode into this kind of overdrive when the team is 150/1 off 14 overs or score 90 off 30 balls when the team needs 110 to win an ODI.
 
The youngsters like Lynn and Head are definitely better T20 batsmen than some of the seniors like Smith, White and Watson but reputation from other formats will keep these guys out.

Head's innings today was nothing short of sensational and he did that when he actually needed to rather than many guys who explode into this kind of overdrive when the team is 150/1 off 14 overs or score 90 off 30 balls when the team needs 110 to win an ODI.

Yeah and he's done it once.
 
Yeah and he's done it once.

I remember him playing some excellent knocks last year's Big Bash as well.

He might be weaker in other formats; I'm just saying he's very good at this format, and coincidentally guys like Smith and Watto aren't as good at this format because the former values his wicket too much and the latter is too inconsistent and his failures are too scratchy and slow.
 
I remember him playing some excellent knocks last year's Big Bash as well.

He might be weaker in other formats; I'm just saying he's very good at this format, and coincidentally guys like Smith and Watto aren't as good at this format because the former values his wicket too much and the latter is too inconsistent and his failures are too scratchy and slow.

211 runs at 30.

Nothing special
 
211 runs at 30.

Nothing special

And even otherwise, 30 is an excellent avg at T20 (equivalent to an ODI 50), but the SR is superb.

Like why not do a comparative with Watto or Smith?

Watto also 30, SR 10 points lower.

Steve Smith 28, SR 27 points lower.

You can't even argue Head was facing bad bowlers. The bowling in Big Bash is excellent.
 
Travis Head
Hmm, interesting surname
I wonder what inspired somebody to come up with it :ksi
 
And even otherwise, 30 is an excellent avg at T20 (equivalent to an ODI 50), but the SR is superb.

Like why not do a comparative with Watto or Smith?

Watto also 30, SR 10 points lower.

Steve Smith 28, SR 27 points lower.

You can't even argue Head was facing bad bowlers. The bowling in Big Bash is excellent.

The bowling in big bash is rubbish save for one or two teams
 
Good innings of 39 by Travis Head today but he must feel gutted he got out to such an average ball.
 
Looking good for Aus as he scored 106 today vs Middlesex
 
Fighting 42* to save his side at Lord's in 2019 Ashes - what a performance!
 
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Head is miles better than Marsh brothers.

I think Head should have a permanent position in Test.
 
Australia's Test vice-captain Travis Head, who was left out of the final Ashes Test earlier this year, is eyeing big white-ball runs in his bid to stake a claim for a Test spot again.

After Australia retained the Ashes in the fourth Test in Manchester, Head, who averaged just 27.28 in four Tests in the series, was replaced by all-rounder Mitchell Marsh for the final Test at The Oval.

In his first Sheffield Shield outing of the 2019-20 season, Head, who captains South Australia, laboured to 51 off 184 balls in a drawn match against Victoria, before being dismissed for a 25-ball duck and 12 in the next game against Queensland, which his side lost by four wickets.

Now, Head is looking at a switch to the white-ball format, with his side South Australia set to take on Queensland in The Marsh Cup, the domestic one-day competition, in a bid to get back into form.

"I think one-day cricket in the middle of summer is a good thing, sometimes it can give you a little bit of freedom," Head said. "I can go out and hit the ball, I can go out and play with a bit of freedom. At the moment, I probably have not given myself the best opportunity, but I feel like runs aren't too far away."

Head further said that although he hasn't made enough runs to press for a Test spot yet, he is hopeful of returning for the home series against Pakistan.

"I hope so, if I get enough runs," he said of a comeback. "Cricket can sometimes be a cruel game. Sometimes you can get a lot of runs and feel like you are not batting well, sometimes you can bat well and not get runs.

"I would love to be there [in the first Test against Pakistan], obviously, but I will keep doing what I am doing. If I spend a bit of time out in a one-day game and follow it up with a [good] Shield game, I can go back to playing really good cricket."

Australia begin their two-Test series against Pakistan on 21 November in Brisbane.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1462710
 
South Australia's Test hopeful Travis Head has posted a compelling century against a powerful NSW attack in the Marsh Sheffield Shield game in Adelaide.

Head, seeking to reclaim his Test spot for the Pakistan home series, made a fighting 109 on Saturday.

The Redbacks are 7-222 at stumps on day two, after bowling the Blues out for 289 with paceman Chadd Sayers collecting a career-best 8-64.

SA skipper Head was given an Ashes run of four Tests with middling returns of 191 runs at 27.28 before being axed for the fifth Test.

He's among a batch of batsmen seeking Shield runs before a high-stakes selection audition against Pakistan for Australia A from November 11 in Perth.

Alex Carey has been named captain of A side, with Head, Usman Khawaja, Joe Burns and Marcus Harris all wanting to press their claims for the first Test starting November 21.

Head's composed 214-ball innings featured nine fours but he was dismissed just three overs before stumps by Josh Hazlewood, while Tom Cooper (37) was the only other batsman to pass 20.

The 25-year-old Head's 11th first-class century came against a Blues bowling line-up featuring Test stars Hazlewood (1-58 from 20 overs) and Nathan Lyon (1-42 from 20).

Head's knock is timely for both his Test prospects and his state, but teammate Sayers has written off his chances, no matter how many wickets he takes.

Sayers' haul was the best by a South Australian since Jason Gillespie's 8-50 in 2001 as he made regular inroads into NSW's through their first innings.

The right-armer who made his Test debut against South Africa on their eventful tour of South Africa in 2018 was realistic when asked about his chances of winning his spot back.

"My aim now is just to play for South Australia, taking wickets and putting us in positions to win games," he told reporters after play Friday. "That's my focus now.

"The Aussie side is going really well now, they've got a lot of star bowlers. I think I'm a fair way down the rank now. I just enjoy playing for South Australia."

NSW debutant Daniel Solway dominated the visitors' innings with an unbeaten 133 and Peter Nevill made 53.

SA XI: Jake Weatherald, Henry Hunt, Callum Ferguson, Travis Head (c), Tom Cooper, Harry Nielsen (wk), Tom Andrews, Nick Winter, Chadd Sayers, Luke Robins, Wes Agar.

NSW XI: Daniel Hughes, Nick Larkin, Daniel Solway, Moises Henriques, Matthew Gilkes, Nick Bertus, Peter Nevill (c/wk), Trent Copeland, Nathan Lyon, Harry Conway, Josh Hazlewood.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/mat...m-scores-highlights-report-day-two/2019-11-02
 
Test berths are on the line but Australia A players will not let personal ambition come before the opportunity to put Pakistan on the back foot in next week's day-night tour match in Perth.

Batsman Travis Head, who is locked in a tussle with Australia A teammates Nic Maddinson and Will Pucovksi for a spot in the Test middle order, said he expected the 'team first' mentality of recent Australia A sides to continue.

"I think it's really important this week that the first (pink-ball) game against Pakistan we put them under real pressure," Head said on radio station SEN's SA Breakfast.

"We've got a really strong Australia A team and if we start the summer well then we put them under pressure for the Test series.

"There's a lot riding on it for a few batters but one thing we've done well as a group is focusing on trying to win the game, and whoever that person is that gets the runs that's great and we'll all be supporting them."

Under Justin Langer's regime as head coach, tour matches have taken on greater significance in the selection process, with the three-day day-night match against Pakistan at the Perth Stadium essentially a bat off between contenders to fill the last vacancies in the top six.

The strong line-up, captained by Australia's ODI and T20 gloveman Alex Carey, follows the winter Australia A series in the UK that helped play the likes of Head and Matthew Wade into the Ashes series.

A similar series in India ahead of Langer's first Test series in charge of Australia – two Tests against Pakistan in the UAE last October – saw Head and Marnus Labuschagne selected for their Test debuts; and last January twin tons for Australia A saw Kurtis Patterson elevated into the Test squad to debut against Sri Lanka.

"The Australia A team has always put aside personal achievement or personal gains," Head said.

"There's a lot riding on these games and spots in the Test team up are for grabs but one thing the players did really well in England and India before the Dubai series was to be able to put the team first.

"We've had two or three tours where there's been a lot of speculation and we all want runs but we've been able to put the team first."

Head flies to Perth for the Australia A game on the back of scores of 109 and 29 in the Redbacks' Marsh Sheffield Shield defeat to New South Wales, who boasted a bowling attack led by Test quick Josh Hazlewood and spinner Nathan Lyon.

"I felt like I'd been batting well and just hadn't been able to post a score (before the last round)," he said.

"I felt like I'd been doing the work off the field, and spent a long time doing drills with Greg Blewett during the week and I knew it would translate into some sort of form eventually.

"It was disappointing to get out cheaply in the second innings even more so because once you're in form you want to keep backing it up.

"But I'm looking forward to Perth, hopefully I can get some more runs and see where it takes us.

"It's about trying to grab that opportunity but not try and force it too much, not trying to chase runs too hard, just let it be."

Head was dropped for the fifth and final Ashes Test in September as Australia opted to play allrounder Mitchell Marsh, but the 25-year-old right-hander boasts a career average of 42.70 from 12 Tests.

And while speculation over the makeup of the Australian XI for the opening Domain Test against Pakistan from November 21 gathers pace, Head is in a good space.

"I was comfortable coming out of England on what I needed to do and where I was at with Trevor (Hohns) and 'JL' (Justin Langer)," Head added.

"I guess at this time of year … the speculation around the Test team is at its highest, because you've got four Shield games going into the first Test and there is spots up for grabs.

"If you get a duck or you get a hundred, you're either high or low and everyone speculates over one innings.

"I spoke to Trevor the other day about the Australia A game … you've just got to try and get as many runs as you can, but that's not just these four games, it's the whole season.

"I think it just gets highlighted more because it's the first Test of the summer and there's so much building on it and there's so much hype around it.

"Every innings comes under the spotlight but I'm not worrying about that, I'm just concentrating on winning games of cricket."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tra...ressure-pakistan-match-perth-tests/2019-11-08
 
Now that the aspirants for vacant berths in Australia's Test batting line-up have failed to further their claims, South Australia coach Jamie Siddons believes his skipper Travis Head is frontrunner for a recall.

While Head was among the Australia A top-order that folded in the first innings Pakistan in the tour match at Perth yesterday, Siddons pointed to the former Test vice-captain's recent Marsh Sheffield Shield century against a star-studded New South Wales attack as proof he is in form.

And with no genuine rival posting a first-innings score in what was billed as a 'bat-off' for Test places against touring Pakistan, Siddons says the changes Head has made to his game plus his proven track record at Test level should see his inclusion.

The Australia team for the two-match Domain Test Series against Pakistan will be named tomorrow, a week before the first match begins at the Gabba in Brisbane on November 21.

Head lost his place in the Test line-up for the final Ashes Test at The Oval last September, but is widely seen as duelling with uncapped Victoria batter Will Pucovski for the vacant lower-middle order spot.

"He (Head) has done everything right since he's been back (after the Ashes), and batted beautifully," Siddons said during SA's current Shield match against Tasmania.

"That was probably the best hundred I've seen for the year, that one last week, against the best attack we've faced.

"So if they're going to pick someone in form, he's the one."

Siddons wouldn't be drawn on whether Pucovski, who fell for five in the Australia A tour game against Pakistan yesterday, was ready for a Test debut having averaged 40 in first-class cricket since his debut almost three years ago.

But he noted that if the national selectors were looking for a player who has shown an ability to perform at Test level, and is in good first-class form then Head is worthy of inclusion ahead of the 21-year-old Victorian.

"He (Pucovski) is a good kid, he's a good player, but who knows – I don't think he's as ready as Travis Head," Siddons said, noting that Head has averaged 42.70 in his 12 Test appearances to date.

"I don't expect him (Head) to miss out (on the Test team).

"He's a good enough player and he's got that hundred (against NSW) already.


"He talks about the game really well and what he's going to do against each different bowler, and that's a growth in him that I didn't see last year.

"That's probably a great thing that he took into the game against New South Wales the other day.

"He had different plans for (Josh) Hazlewood, (Trent) Copeland, (Harry) Conway and (Nathan) Lyon, so it wasn't just playing the same game against all the bowlers.

"He was leaving balls outside the off stump, not playing the back-foot drive, that was the thing I thought was the secret to it.

"Hopefully he can continue to do that."

Head, like incumbent Test opener David Warner, was targeted during the Ashes by England's seamers who saw a weakness in his technique when right-armers Stuart Broad, Jofra Archer and Ben Stokes attacked his stumps from around the wicket.

But in addition to addressing those shortcomings based on feedback from men's team coach Justin Langer and his assistant Graeme Hick, and by working assiduously with SA batting mentor Greg Blewett, the 25-year-old has looked to improve other aspects of his game.

He has also worked diligently on his captaincy, taking note of the strategies and methods employed by senior teammates and leaders in rival teams.

"He's pretty switched on," Siddons said of Head's tactical acumen.

"He's learned from all the other captains he's captained against and the people he's played with – Steve Smith and co.

"He's learned from (former Victoria skipper now Adelaide Strikers teammate) Cameron White and guys who captain their sides really well.

"He sees the way they go about it, and he tries to mimic some of their field placements at times and find his own.


"I think he's tactically getting very good. He's been a great leader of the team since he came back.

"It (his Test axing) just tells you that you've got to be consistent, keep putting the runs out there.

"Langer is looking for answers and consistency, and Trav's just got to be that consistent player, putting big scores up.

"Not 40s and 50s, he (Langer) wants hundreds."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tra...lia-a-pakistan-perth-jamie-siddons/2019-11-13
 
Travis Head will use the template laid down by Test teammate Marnus Labuschagne to try and forge his way back into Australia's white-ball set-up despite missing out on the current campaign in the UK.

Head, the incumbent Test vice-captain, was heartened to be named in Australia's initial 26-man squad for this month's T20I and ODI matches against England but admits he was disappointed to be cut from the final 21-member touring party.

The 26-year-old began his international career in the 20-over format in 2016 before earning an ODI cap six months later and then a Baggy Green in 2018, but has not played a white-ball game for Australia in almost two years.

Head concedes he felt "flat" after undergoing a concerted training program with South Australia prior to the final UK squad being announced last month, but has received clear feedback from coach Justin Langer and other selectors, and understands elements of his short-form game that need further work.

Given the recent results and form shown by top-order batters in Australia's T20 and ODI line-ups, he knows scoring hundreds is the currency that will bankroll his potential promotion.

And he cites the example of Labuschagne, who made his Test debut alongside Head in the UAE two years ago and has since become one of the most prolific run-scorers in world cricket, in plotting a path from the Test team to the shorter formats.

On the strength of his break-out Test performances last summer, which lifted him to third in the global batting rankings behind Australia's Steve Smith and India's Virat Kohli, Labuschagne was added to the national ODI team earlier this year and currently averages 50 after just seven matches.

He is also part of Australia's squad for the current T20I and ODI series against England, and smashed a century off 100 balls as opener in one of the recent T20 internal trial matches at Southampton.

"I'd love to be in all three formats but at the moment, I'm out of two of them," Head told cricket.com.au.

"But hopefully I'll be in that first Test squad for the coming summer and then the Test team, and I can perform from the start.

"As we've seen with Marnus, he's got massive runs in Test match cricket and forced himself into both limited-overs formats of the game.

"It's almost that if you get yourself into one, you can get yourself into the others so that will be my goal.

"I was excited by the fact I got myself into an extended squad, then trained really hard and felt really good.

"I've missed out a few times over the last couple of years and feel like I've been really close … it's extremely difficult to get in, which it should be.

"I know where I sit, I know where I have to get better and I'll continue to do that."

Head concedes that if he is to return to international limited-overs cricket, it is more likely to be through the ODI format (Australia are currently ranked fifth in the world) rather than T20s in which Australia and England are vying for global top billing.

He played the most recent of his 42 ODIs in the three-match home series against South Africa in November 2018, losing his place after returning a trio of single-figure scores.

Prior to that campaign, Head had been Australia's third-highest ODI run-scorer since his debut (behind David Warner and Steve Smith) with 1258 at an average of 37 including 10 scores of 50-plus, but a solitary century from his 36 innings.

It's an inability to convert solid starts into sizeable scores that has characterised his batting across all formats at international and domestic level, and redressing the discrepancy has been a focus of Head's pre-season training with SA.

The left-hander has scored more runs in his first 17 Tests (1091 at 41.16) than did former Test skippers Ricky Ponting (1027 at 38.04) and Michael Clarke (1004 at 40,16), and only one run fewer than Steve Smith at the same stage of his career (1092 at 36.40).

But critics point to a conversion rate that shows Head has just two hundreds from his nine scores of 50 or more in Tests, and only eight centuries along with his 32 half-centuries in the Sheffield Shield.

Despite his best ODI innings – 128 against Pakistan and 96 against England – both coming when he opened alongside Warner at his beloved Adelaide Oval, Head has foreshadowed batting himself at number three for the West End Redbacks when the domestic one-day season begins.

"I think I'm pretty flexible," he said when asked what role he saw himself playing to try and force himself back into Australia's ODI line-up.

"I've batted one to six across the 40-odd one-dayers I've played and I feel like I can do a role in either (opening or middle-order).

"But I probably see myself and Kez (Australia ODI keeper Alex Carey) batting at three and four for SA, and aim to be that matchwinner in the middle-order by batting the whole innings.

"If I need to walk out there in the first over then I have that experience to face the new ball, and if I walk in in the 30th or 40th over then I think I've got the power game to accelerate.

"I've made some really good improvements on my game in the last 18 months, and there's still improvement to happen in all formats of the game.

"But my main priority at the moment is making sure I'm ready to go when the season starts, and having a massive summer in Test cricket."

While his Redbacks teammate Carey has been stripped of the vice-captaincy he had shared with fast bowler Pat Cummins after selectors opted to 'streamline' the limited-overs leadership structure, Head is unaware of plans to similarly rejig the Test team office-bearers.

He was named one of Test skipper Tim Paine's deputies last year – initially alongside Cummins after incumbent vice-captains Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Marsh were sidelined by injury and poor form – and has retained the role despite being dropped for the final Ashes Test in 2019.

Head became the second-youngest full-time captain (after Victoria's 20-year-old skipper Cameron White) in the Sheffield Shield's 127-year history when appointed to lead SA in 2015 aged 21, and has made more Shield appearances before turning 25 (63) than any other player.

However, he maintains he'll remain part of the Test XI's on-field leadership team regardless of whether he retains the title or Cummins is installed as stand-alone deputy, which would seemingly bolster his claims to assuming the captaincy on a permanent basis in the future.

"I don't know anything about what the plans are for that," Head said.

"If I'm the best man for the job and I can help in some capacity, then I'd love to (be Test vice-captain).

"It's a great role to have and there's a lot of honour that comes with it, so if I can help Painey or anyone and they see me in that role, then that's fantastic.

"But at the end of the day I'm there to get runs and help the team, and the leadership is something you can contribute to without being the vice-captain."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tra...stralia-vice-captaincy-sa-redbacks/2020-09-08
 
He can bat anywhere in the top 6 , a solid fielder, and can bowl some part time spin. I don't understand why Australia have not given him a run in the LO team.

I think he would do better in LO compared to tests.
 
Fantastic counter-attacking century, the third-fastest in Ashes history by number of balls (85):

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His position in the middle order should now be secure for the next year or so.
 
Top knock. He is 27 so has good career ahead. Just need to be consistent enough.
 
One of the great Ashes knocks for me. I wasn’t actually sure about his selection either — in the previous Ashes in England, our bowlers were generally on top of him. But this week was the best of Travis. An absolute barnstormer of an innings!
 
I thought he was gonna be the weak link in Australian batting line up but the way he played completely took the game away from England.
Wonderful knock he played one of the best test innings I have ever seen.
 
A bit of background on Head:

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If the historic evolution of number five batters in Australia's men's Test team provide a clue to the future, then Travis Head's breakthrough Ashes campaign might herald an exciting if unpredictable ride.

The three leading runs-scorers for Australia in that key middle-order post – Steve Waugh, Michael Clarke and Allan Border – developed their games in keeping with the tenor of their times before going on to lengthy tenures as Test captains.


Waugh and Border were born of an era when Australia were routinely pummelled by opponents (most ruthlessly the West Indies) and fashioned their games around defiant defence which could switch to counter-attack when and if opportunity presented.

By contrast, Clarke arrived at international level when Australia ruled the cricket world and was afforded the comparative luxury of finding his feet at the elite level behind a top-order of Matthew Hayden, Justin Langer and Ricky Ponting and proved a more attacking weapon as a result.

Head cannot be included in the same conversation as any of the above given the nascent nature of his Test career (23 matches), but his performance in winning the Compton-Miller Medal as player of the 2021-22 Vodafone Ashes confirms he has an opportunity to join those exalted predecessors.

QUICK SINGLE
Head’s golden summer capped with dual Hobart gongs
And according to his skipper Pat Cummins, if the free-scoring left-hander wants to tackle the number five job in a way that might cause purists to raise an eyebrow then that's totally fine, based on the evidence Head put forward in the captain's first series at the helm.

"He goes about it a little bit differently to most other batters, which is his biggest strength," Cummins said in the wake of Australia's 146-run win in the fifth Test at Blundstone Arena which sealed a thumping 4-0 Ashes triumph.

"So as a captain, I don't care if he gets out in non-traditional ways, I just want him to go out, be free and play his game."

That vote of confidence played a significant part in Head's successful return to Test cricket having lost his place in the starting XI, and then his Cricket Australia contract, as a result of last summer's home series loss to India.

Those "non-traditional" dismissals have previously polarised views of the 28-year-old's approach to batting since he made his debut for South Australia as a precociously talented teenager in 2013.

His preparedness to play his shots and put pressure on bowlers brought some critiques that Head admits were understandably harsh, none more so than in his maiden home Test campaign against India in 2018-19 when he twice holed out to third man in the same match at Perth.

"I went through a period when I understand dismissals might not have looked the best, and I might get caught at third man or flap at a ball and obviously I don't want to do that," Head said today.

"My default as a batter technically means (when) I nick the ball, I've thrown my hands through it.

"It doesn't look pretty, I understand that, but I also understand no dismissal ever looks pretty.

"Pat's given me the confidence to go out and play.

"He alluded to that (India) game at Optus Stadium and he goes, 'Look, if you take the game on and you get done at third man a couple of times and you're playing the right way', it's no skin off his nose, and he backs me one hundred per cent.

"That probably gave me the confidence to go into this series and be myself and play the situation as I see it."

Head's next challenge, as he happily concedes, is to take that instinctive approach that's netted him more than 1,500 runs in 23 Tests (average 43.14) and apply it to vastly different batting conditions that await in Pakistan and Sri Lanka where Australia's next two Test assignments take place.

Apart from his first two Tests against Pakistan in the UAE in late 2018, the left-hander has played all his Test cricket on familiar pitches in Australia or England where he's played both red and white-ball formats in recent northern summers.

However, the remedial work he undertook to his technique in the aftermath of his axing last season, under the tutelage of former Australia coach now SA high performance boss Tim Nielsen has instilled in Head the belief he will be properly prepared for whatever awaits on the subcontinent later this year.

"I'll look at what the expected conditions maybe look like over the next couple of weeks and know what I have to do mindset-wise to prepare for that," he said.

"I know conditions in Pakistan can be challenging, they've got a lot of fast bowlers whether it's green and seaming around or spin friendly, we'll wait and see.

"Like any tour, and the same in Sri Lanka, I think you look at ways you may be able to counteract and over the next couple of weeks I'll definitely look at the areas I can get better at.

"I know going away, whether it's going to be spin in an away series, or seam or swing, the same method (applies) for me – I'll play strong cricket shots, strong defence and if I'm beaten, I'm beaten.

"And I'll try to be hard to get out and try to look for scoring opportunities."

In addition to losing his place in Australia's Test line-up twice in the three years since debuting amid the turmoil caused by the sandpaper suspensions, Head was also installed as vice-captain alongside Cummins in 2019, only to have the title withdrawn when it was decided a single deputy would suffice.

But given the breeding ground for future leaders the Australia number five batting berth has proved, it's a not unreasonable assumption Head might one day lead his country with the surety he's shown since taking over the SA captaincy in 2015 at age 21.

Taking on a heavier leadership responsibility within the Test set-up is another ambition he has set himself now he's shored up a place in the first XI, at least for the medium term, although he understands one highly-productive series does not an Australia career make.

"The challenge now I've had this series is to continue to do that and embed myself in this team, try and be a leader in this team, try to be as consistent a person and player as I possibly can and make that step, as I have in Shield cricket, now in Test cricket," he said.

"It's going to be tough, there's definitely going to be times when that's going to be extremely difficult and the pressure's going to be on and it's a harsh spotlight.

"Over a lot of my early Test matches, in the 2019 Ashes or Dubai (against Pakistan) and a few times throughout this summer, I've walked in (to bat) in some tricky situations.

"I've obviously played a different way, but that was the way I felt was best for the team or for the scenario."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tra...australia-confidence-pakistan-tour/2022-01-17
 
Travis Head believes the looming Pakistan tour will define him as Test cricketer more than his home-track bullying of England.

The Australian was the player of the series in Australia's 4-0 Ashes thumping of England, his 357 runs featuring two centuries.

Head boasts an average of 49.87, with four tons, from his 17 Tests in Australia.

But in his six Tests outside of Australia, the lefthander averages just 28.45 with no centuries.

"I think what defines you as a player, the away series," Head told reporters on Thursday.

Head cited teammate Steve Smith as a prime example - Smith averages 60 in Tests in India, close to his 59.87 career average.

"You look at Smithy's record in India, when he goes away to India and plays on those wickets it takes him to a different level," Head said.

"On the flipside, you can't chase that, you can't change yourself, you can't try and be someone that you're not.

"But definitely going away ... how tough I found it in an Ashes away - different environments, different crowds, different conditions.

"It's definitely challenging and you definitely get tested and I think that is where you can take your game to a different level."

Head is in Melbourne with the Australian squad ahead of their departure for the three-Test tour of Pakistan starting March 4.

No Australian team has toured Pakistan since 1998.

"It's hard to really know what we're going to come up against or what the conditions are going to be," Head said.

He described security protocols for the tour as "sound" - no Tests were played in Pakistan for the decade following a terrorist attack on Sri Lanka's team in 2009.

"The communication has been good on what we're expecting once we get there," Head said of the security arrangements.

"We're in pretty safe hands. I am not sure how public it's going to be, on what the protocols are for us.

"But in terms of communication and how we're going to feel over there or the protocols that we're under to keep us safe ... I don't think there is any of those concerns and what they're putting in place for us is sound."

https://7news.com.au/sport/cricket/pakistan-a-defining-test-tour-travis-head-c-5824287
 
Travis Head struggled slightly during the test series, but is on fire so far in the first odi, hammering the Pak bowlers all around the park.
 
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He is a good ODI player.

I remember he once had a massive partnership with Warner in ODI (250+ runs).
 
Australian batsman Travis Head has created history in the first ODI against Pakistan by becoming the fifth-fastest to reach the century milestone.

Head reached his 100-run mark in only 70 deliveries which included 12 boundaries and three maximums.

The left-hander was eventually sent back to the pavilion by Iftikhar Ahmed as Khushdil Shah held on to Head's catch at long-off.

With this century, Head's name will go down in the history books as he has equaled the number of deliveries it took Ross Taylor to get to the milestone back in 2011.

Here are the fastest centuries against Pakistan in ODIs:

46 - Jos Buttler, 2015
48 - Sanath Jayasuriya, 1996
50 - Jos Buttler, 2019
69 - Mushfiqur Rahim, 2015
70 - Travis Head, Today
70 - Ross Taylor, 2011

In addition to that, Head has also become the fastest Australian to reach the milestone against Pakistan.
 
Australian Test great Allan Border has urged middle-order batter Travis Head to look to legendary opener Matthew Hayden for inspiration and develop a gameplan to be used in subcontinent conditions during his side's tour to India, which will take place this year. This comes after the batter experienced some terrible outings in the Test series against Pakistan and Sri Lanka. His failures in the subcontinent sit in contrast with a dominant Ashes campaign last summer, in which he scored 357 runs and emerged as the 'Player of the Series'. In his outings in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, he has scored only 91 runs at a poor average of 15.17 and the highest individual score of 26.

The Aussies are desperate to end their Test drought in India, having won only one series since 2004. In this context, Border opines that Head's strategy should undergo revision to thrive in spinning conditions. The former skipper has a great record in Asia himself, having scored 1,799 runs at an average of 54.51, with six centuries scored across India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

"He has got to sit down and work out a method better than it is going at the moment, that is for sure. I have talked to him a little bit about batting on spinning wickets," cricket.com.au quoted Border as saying.

"He has got to learn how to sweep, and sweep well. And he has got to use his feet - people do not seem to be prepared to go down the track, and defend even."

"There are just a few subtle little things. He is a very good player against anything other than the turning ball. That is the chink he has got to work on, but it is (play the) sweep shot, use your feet, get on the front foot, and when you are trying to defend, use nice soft hands."

"We are going to go to the subcontinent a lot so if he wants to be in the frame, he needs to learn how to play the turning ball."

Hayden had a record-breaking campaign in India in 2001, in which he scored 549 runs at an average of 109.80. The sweep shot was his key weapon in subcontinent conditions. By the end of his career, he was able to gather 1,663 runs in Asia at an average of 50.39, behind Border and Ponting (1,889 at an average of 41.97).

"Hayden is a great example. You are talking about a kid who batted on the Gabba five games a year, then the WACA ... Sydney (the SCG pitch) turned, that was the only place that really (gave you a chance to bat) against a spin bowler," said Border.

"He just developed a fantastic sweep shot, and it is a hard shot, because if you do get it wrong and you get hit on the pad, with the DRS now ... these days you get given out playing sweeps, whereas going back in time you did not necessarily get given out," he added. HeadHead did score well in ODIs, making 70* on a turning pitch during the third ODI against Sri Lanka at Colombo, then conceded that he had erred in his plans after being dismissed for six runs at Galle in the first Test against the Lankans.

"I just made a mistake - trying to work the ball to midwicket on a full ball that is probably outside the line (of leg stump)," said Head. "It is amazing all the work you can do in the nets and feel good and prepare the best way and talk about it, but it is about going out and emulating that," he added.

"So double down on those plans, watch(ing) how (his teammates) went about it, they did it really well for the Test."

"I thought in general the way I eyed the ball up, the way my hands were working was good. It is just you make one mistake, and you sit in the sheds."

"I have played well on spinning pitches in Australia. These are different - I have never played on a wicket like that - so another one to take into consideration ... It is nice to know they might not get harder than that."

During the second innings of the second SL test, he started experimenting with the sweep shot. Aussie head coach Andrew McDonald's post-tour critique also contextualised his struggles at the No. 5 position.

"He is here for the first time. He has been exposed to conditions that are very foreign. We saw him add the sweep shot in during (the final) innings. He has been working incredibly hard on his game. Sometimes, you make one small error and you are not there to actually see if your method works or not," said McDonald.

"There has definitely been a shift in his game in terms of how he wants to play in these conditions. So we are optimistic that across the journey if given more time, that can no doubt work," he added.

NDTV
 
69 off 57 for Head versus England in 1st ODI
 
Travis Head scores 100* off 92 in the ongoing 3rd ODI against England. Rode his luck, but made it count and scored a big one. Having a great year in ODIs so far.
 
Should be ODI captain imo. I don't think theres a more impactful 50 overs batsman. I believe his strike rate in Marsh Cup last year was around 150.

No better candidate for ODI captaincy.
 
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