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[VIDEOS] Adam Zampa - Australian leg-spinner

By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE, May 12 (Reuters) - Spin bowler Adam Zampa has joined calls for a review of Australia's wickets, saying the country's drop-in pitches are driving slow bowlers out of first class cricket.

Short format specialist Zampa said he had rarely come across a genuine turning wicket in domestic Sheffield Shield matches, apart from the odd occasion at the Sydney Cricket Ground and when the Adelaide Oval's drop-in pitch was "green and patchy".

Drop-in pitches are now used at most major cricket venues in Australia barring the SCG and the Gabba in Brisbane, and Zampa said they had changed the game "massively."

"It's really hard to get a wicket now that's a day four turner with any rough," the 28-year-old legspinner told reporters in a video call on Tuesday.

"(Spin has) basically been taken out of the game now except for maybe the SCG for example - sometimes - if the weather suits as well.

"We've had to play a different role in first class cricket, that's for sure."

Zampa's comments come after Australia batsman and Queensland captain Usman Khawaja voiced similar concerns over the weekend, saying he was often reluctant to employ legspinner Mitchell Swepson given the lack of assistance from local pitches.

Test spinner Steve O'Keefe retired from first-class cricket last month after failing to win another contract for New South Wales, despite being the most prolific wicket-taker among slow bowlers in Shield cricket.

Zampa said administrators had helped batsmen improve their technique against swing bowling with the introduction of Dukes balls into the Shield, and now spinners needed help.

"I don't know if it has to be every wicket but I think there has to be some sort of emphasis in bringing spin bowlers back into the game, particularly on day four as well," he said.

Zampa has been a key player in Australia's one-day and Twenty20 teams but is keen for more red ball cricket to boost his hopes of winning a test cap.

He has been linked with a move to NSW from South Australia where he has been frustrated with his limited chances.

With the finalisation of state contracts delayed due to the coronavirus, Zampa declined to comment on his domestic movements.

He was more forthcoming about his test ambitions, though, saying he hoped to win a place for tours of the subcontinent in coming years, where selectors are more inclined to pick a second spinner along with incumbent Nathan Lyon.

He conceded his modest bowling average of 48.26 in 38 first class matches had probably done him few favours at the selectors table but felt his short form performances showed his improvement in recent years.

"Over the last few years it's probably really easy for people to pinpoint me as a while-ball bowler," he said.

"I really want to change people's perceptions."

(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Richard Pullin)

https://www.eurosport.co.uk/cricket...g-wickets-in-australia_sto7746683/story.shtml
 
Zampa's best ODI figures:

4-43 (9.4) vs Pakistan, 2019
4-55 (10) vs England, TODAY
3-16 (5.3) vs West Indies, 2016
3-37 (10) vs Ireland, 2016
 
Spinner Adam Zampa will miss the first match of the Indian Premier League (IPL) for the Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) as he is getting married, the team's director of cricket Mike Hesson said on Wednesday.

"We won't have our full contingent of overseas players available for the first game. Adam Zampa is getting married. It's an important time for him and it's something that as a franchise we are aware of and we respect and we hope he has a great time. So when he joins us, once again he is going to be fresh and make a massive contribution to the rest of the tournament," Hesson said in a video tweeted by the franchise.

Hesson said that travelling has been a challenge for Australian players and staff with head coach Simon Katich yet to arrive in Chennai where the team is under quarantine for a training camp. "Getting people out of Australia has been a challenge. Simon has been ready to go for a long time, it will be probably two days before he is able to jump on a plane and join us. The documentation has been a bit challenging," said Hesson.

The IPL gets underway on April 9 with RCB facing defending champions Mumbai Indians in the opening match.

https://www.timesnownews.com/sports...ge-will-miss-seasons-opening-encounter/736634
 
Adam Zampa hopes his success in one-day and Twenty20 internationals will earn him a spot in Australia’s Test squad.

One of the world’s leading leg-spinners in short-form cricket, Zampa was a key player in Australia breaking their T20 drought on the West Indies tour, claiming 2-20 from four overs in a tense victory. It came after Australia lost the first three matches and the series.

Marsh and Starc carry Australia to first win over the Windies

After three straight losses on this tour, Australia have beaten the West Indies by four runs. Mitchell Marsh and Starc were transcendent in the win, carrying he Aussies with both bat and ball.

Australia prepare to play their fifth and final T20 match against the West Indies in St Lucia on Saturday before relocating to Barbados for three one-day matches beginning Wednesday.

The ever-confident Zampa, 29, believes he can convert his white-ball mysteries to the red ball despite a modest first-class bowling average of 48.

“[Those are] conversations I’ll be having with selectors once Tests, particularly to the subcontinent, start up again. I’m bowling well and I’m keen to be on those tours,” Zampa said on Friday.

There will be no shortage of potential opportunities next year, with Australia scheduled for Test tours of Pakistan, Sri Lanka and India, depending on security and the pandemic.

“I definitely still harbour ambitions [to play Test cricket],” Zampa said.

“I’ll play any cricket that’s available. It’s just worked out that in recent years white ball has been the highlight of that. We’ve had so many white-ball tours where I just haven’t had the opportunity to play red ball.

“Every time I’ve been available, I’ve tried to play.”

Zampa began his first-class career for NSW almost a decade ago but moved to South Australia for more opportunities.

‘If I’m bowling well at the time those tours get selected, hopefully I’ll be on them.’

He returned home last season looking to swap in and out of the NSW side with Nathan Lyon, Australia’s leading Test spinner. It seemed an easy fit, with Zampa on international white-ball duties and then playing for the Blues when Lyon was in the Test side.

However, the topsy-turvy nature of a schedule complicated by COVID-19 meant Zampa did not play a single Sheffield Shield game last season while Lyon played nine and was the competition’s leading bowler, with 42 wickets at 26.

Zampa’s last first-class match was for South Australia in early December 2019. Since then he has played 13 ODIs, claiming 27 wickets, and 18 international T20s for 17 wickets.

He is eighth on the International Cricket Council’s T20 bowler rankings and 15th in ODIs.

“I don’t think playing Shield cricket is the be all and end all of getting in the Test squad,” he said. “I think if I’m bowling well at the time those tours get selected, hopefully I’ll be on them.

“It’s disappointing I haven’t had a lot of opportunities in recent years to play first-class cricket because, at the end of the day, people do look at your career stats but it probably doesn’t really reflect the bowler you are at the moment.

“I played a lot of my first-class cricket when I was 21, 22, 23, which was six years ago now and I was inexperienced.

“I did have the odd good game but I wasn’t consistent enough, whereas I think if I played first-class cricket now, I know my game well enough to perform at that level.

“There’s a lot of things to take into consideration when you’re talking about that.”

Australia’s next Test leg-spinner in waiting is widely considered to be Queensland’s Mitchell Swepson, 27, an occasional tourist with the Australia squad who has played four T20Is.

Strongly supported by Shane Warne, Swepson was the third most successful Shield bowler last season with 32 wickets at 23 in five matches, for overall first-class figures of 149 wickets at 34 in 48 games.

However, he suffered a reality check playing for Australia A against India A last season, conceding almost a run a ball with figures of 1-148 from 29 overs.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sp...ml?ref=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_source=rss_feed
 
Bowling well against Sri Lanka in Dubai this evening:

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Second wicket tonight:

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Been very expensive today but at least took the wicket of Roy:

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Zampa 5fer against Bangladesh in the ICC T20 World Cup

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Adam Zampa at the T20 World Cup:

4-26-1 v New Zealand
4-22-1 v Pakistan
4-20-1 v West Indies
4-19-5 v Bangladesh
3-37-1 v England
4-12-2 v Sri Lanka
4-21-2 v South Africa

Overs 27
Runs conceded 157
Wickets 13
Economy rate 5.81
 
Adam Zampa at the T20 World Cup:

4-26-1 v New Zealand
4-22-1 v Pakistan
4-20-1 v West Indies
4-19-5 v Bangladesh
3-37-1 v England
4-12-2 v Sri Lanka
4-21-2 v South Africa

Overs 27
Runs conceded 157
Wickets 13
Economy rate 5.81

One of the candidate for Player of Tournament along with Rizwan, Babar and Buttler.
 
He bowled really well. Could have gotten Player of Tournament.
 
100th ODI wicket for Adam Zampa - outstanding.
 
100th ODI wicket for Adam Zampa - outstanding.

Excellent bowling

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On a roll ...

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I think he is one of the top 3 best ODI spinners (worldwide) right now.

Great LOI bowler.
 
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Leg-spinner Adam Zampa has confirmed he will miss the latter stages of The Hundred in the UK as he sets his sights on Australia's dual World Cup tilts across the next 16 months.

Zampa, who missed Australia's recent tour of Sri Lanka while on paternity leave, will play in the tournament with the Welsh Fire but an overlap in scheduling means he was effectively double booked at the end of August and potentially into September, should the Fire reach the finals.

Australia have an ODI series lined up through that window against Zimbabwe in Townsville (Aug 28 – Sept 3), which is followed closely by another three-match series against New Zealand in Cairns (Sept 6-11).

They will be the first ODIs in Australia since December 2020 and the white-ball specialist, who has recently returned to some light bowling near his home on the NSW Far North Coast, is eager to begin his road to the next two World Cups.

"I think the way it'll go with The Hundred is I'll play part of the tournament," Zampa told cricket.com.au. "In an ideal world the schedule lines up and you don't have to play half (a tournament), but this Zimbabwe tour of the Top End has been years in the making, so I'll be on deck for that.

"I love playing for Australia. The tour to Sri Lanka is the only one I've ever pulled out of, and I don't have any plans on pulling out of any more tours, other than for life-changing events.

"I needed the break mentally and physically, and it was nice to be able to put some time into the family as well, but I've picked up the tools again recently.

"Brisbane is really close so I've been able to have a couple of bowls at AB Field. I also had a bowl at Bangalow Cricket Club's synthetic wicket, and I had my dad over last week, we had the spray paint out and we painted a wicket on the gravel road and I had a bowl in my hiking shoes. They came out well."

The 30-year-old has arguably been in the form of his life of late, leading Australia's wicket-takers with 12 in last year's triumphant T20 World Cup campaign and moving to a career-high 10th place in the ICC ODI rankings in March, while also taking his 100th wicket in the format.

"I think I've generally improved each year," he said. "So until my body starts letting me down, which it isn't at the moment, I think it's all about information that you have in your head, and experience, and I always feel like the less you let things get to you – or the less nervous you are, and the more experience you have – the more likely you are to succeed.

"You literally can't buy that, you have to learn on the go and I think that's the best thing about playing cricket and getting older is that you feel like you do get better with age."

ODI World Cup success is one thing that has so far eluded Zampa. He debuted 11 months after Australia won the 2015 edition, then was a bit-part player in 2019 tournament (four matches, five wickets at 47.20) where pace bowling dominated in English conditions.

But with next year's ODI World Cup on the subcontinent, Zampa's effectiveness looks set to be a key weapon for Australia; India is his most successful country in the format in terms of wickets taken, with his 20 in 11 matches the most of any visiting spinner this century. And as a competitive beast who likes to target the big wickets, it is telling that nine of those have been either Virat Kohli or Rohit Sharma.

"I think team success obviously helps with that," he said of his record in India. "We won that amazing series a few years ago (in 2019) and then the year after we played a three-match ODI series that was really close too (India won 2-1), so we've had good battles over there.

"From a personal point of view, I always just try to compete. That's always my go-to in any circumstances. There were plenty of times in those series in India where I was under the pump, but I just tried to stay in the game and get the big wicket when the opportunity arose."

Zampa zeroed in on more detail when discussing the advantages he sees for himself on home turf in this year's T20I World Cup, as Australia look to become the first team to defend the title. Remarkably, the NSW product has played just 32 of his 129 internationals at home but his understanding of – and familiarity with – the venues via those matches as well as through the KFC BBL is something he feels leaves him well placed to perform.

"In Australia I tend to bowl a little bit more over the top of the ball, to try and get that bounce, because guys are always trying to hit the sightscreen, so anytime I can hit the top of the bat definitely helps," he explains.

"In Dubai in the last World Cup, I tried to almost take bounce and side-spin out of the game and just go underneath the bat.

"So in Australia, you almost want the ball to bounce over the stumps, and then other places, the more you can hit the stumps, the better.

"Cricket's changed a lot in the last few years but we definitely exploited that (home ground advantage) in the 2015 World Cup and I think it's going to be the same here. When you're familiar with grounds, and you aren't overawed by the experience of the crowd, the size of the grounds, the wickets … it does make it easier.

"I'm really confident with our squad. I always tend to think experience wins you those tournaments, and we have that in spades."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/ada...-zealand-townsville-cairns-tickets/2022-07-18
 
Adam Zampa has reacted to being snubbed for the upcoming Test tour of India, admitting the messaging from national selectors has left him feeling 'very flat'.

The 30-year-old has become Australia's premier white-ball spinner in recent years, starring in the side's T20 World Cup victory in 2021 and dominating in ODIs.

But his red-ball career has taken a back-seat, only recently returning to the Sheffield Shield competition after a lengthy absence in a bid to boost his selection chances for India.

Zampa was overlooked for the four-game series, with the Aussies pushing the likes of Ashton Agar, Mitchell Swepson and Todd Murphy into the squad over him.

Speaking to the media ahead of Saturday night's BBL clash between the Stars and Renegades, Zampa revealed his conversations with head selector George Bailey gave him the indication he was going to travel with the Test squad.

"I'm very disappointed, I would loved to have been on it," Zampa said.

"I thought with the way that I've been going in international cricket in particular that this was going to be my opportunity.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/sport/new...sedgntp&cvid=0670d3d9322c443399e880918c582a34
 
Adam Zampa has already tasted success on the big stage by winning an ICC Men's T20 World Cup title and the first-choice Australia spinner wants to complete the double by helping his side hold aloft the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup trophy in India later this year.

Zampa played a huge part in helping Australia to a first T20 World Cup crown in Dubai in 2021 and will have an even bigger role to play on the sub-continent in October and November when his team chase a sixth 50-over World Cup title.

"Winning that T20 World Cup was one of the best feelings I have had on the cricket field and winning the 50-over World Cup would be a pretty similar feeling I would assume," Zampa said during the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup Trophy Tour.

"You don’t get the chance to win World Cups very often.

"We are still thinking about that World Cup we won a couple of years ago (2021) and are trying to recreate that feeling.

"We were disappointed with our 2019 World Cup and how that finished and we still have that burning desire to win a one-day World Cup."

That 2019 World Cup campaign that Zampa refers to saw Australia fall to eventual champions England at the semi-final stage of the event and the five-time winners are working hard to try and emulate their success on home soil in 2015.

Australia currently have a white-ball series in South Africa and then travel to the sub-continent at the end of this month for a series against India prior to the World Cup.

Australia will head into that World Cup campaign with a three-pronged spin attack, with Ashton Agar and Tanveer Sangha named alongside Zampa in a preliminary 18-player squad for the tournament.

Zampa believes there is still some fine-tuning for his side to get right prior to the World Cup, but remains confident his team has enough firepower to go all the way in India.

"Our one-day cricket has been really good for a long time and we are one of the best teams in the world according to the ICC rankings," Zampa noted in relation to Australia’s No.2 ranking behind Pakistan in the MRF Tyres ODI Team Rankings.

"We have been playing really good one-day cricket lately so hopefully the boys have played enough cricket or had enough rest so that when we get to India we are ready to go."
 
I'm not sure why Australia is exclusively using Zampa in ODIs, he seems like a perfect wicket taking option in both T20 and Test cricket as well.
 
Every bowler can have a bad day and today it was a bad day for him. He is more than good enough to bounce back after such performance.
 
Man south africa pitches during the t20 and odis stinks for bowlers all are batting paradise
 
Got his mojo back Australia starting to tick all boxes, a potent attack devastating opener exceptional fielding all what left now is reliable middle order
 
Zampa gaining that much needed confidence is a terrible news for all the other batting line ups out there because he is a very smart bloke who can often be lethal.
 
Pakistan's inability to play decent spinners well of late is a huge concern.

This guy could have a field day if our batting line-up has one of those days.
 
Pakistan's inability to play decent spinners well of late is a huge concern.

This guy could have a field day if our batting line-up has one of those days.

I think Pakistan will deal with the spinners just fine.

Starc, Cummins getting back in form is a mater of concern however
 
4/8 in 3 overs against Ned, has he really improved or just fluking against dud batsmen
 
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Warner on Zampa today:
"Proud of him. He was under some issues - back spasms etc. We were having a laugh that we should change his bowling to 'right-arm googlies'. Good to see him landing them on the spot. Good confidence before the NZ game."
 

Adam Zampa Fires Shots At Ex-Australia Captain After World Cup Success​

Australia spinner Adam Zampa has taken a jibe at former captain Michael Clarke who had earlier criticised the team for their slow start to the World Cup campaign. After suffering defeats in the first two games, Australia turned the tide on its head, pulling off a remarkable comeback to win the World Cup last week. Australia had kicked off their campaign with back-to-back defeats against India and South Africa. However, the Pat Cummins-led side edged out the Proteas in the semi-final, before dominating hosts India in the final last Sunday.

Clarke had criticised the Australian team for a slow start, comparing them to the countries Rugby Union Team, Wallabies, who had crashed out of the group stage of the World Cup for the first time earlier this year in France.

"If we're not careful the conversation we've been having for the last three weeks about the Wallabies, in two weeks' time we'll be having that about Australian cricket. We've got some really tough cricket ahead of us and if we play like this, we are not qualifying. I'm more worried about the subcontinent teams," Clarke had said on Sky Radio.

Zampa had taken notes of Clarke's remark as he took social media to take a cheeky jibe at Australia 2015 World Cup-winning captain.

Quoting Clarke's remarks, Zampa posting a few laughing emojis on his Instagram story.

Source: NDTV
 
They did have a couple of bad games at the start of the World Cup and the criticism from Clark wasn't very unfair. Now, when they have won the tournament, Zampa has every right to settle the things.
 
Adam Zampa's 3/26 (4 overs) ripped through the West Indies' batting lineup, restricting them from chasing the 200+ target. Indeed, he is one of the best white-ball spinners. However, I am not sure why Australia has never tried him in Test cricket.
 
Adam Zampa's 3/26 (4 overs) ripped through the West Indies' batting lineup, restricting them from chasing the 200+ target. Indeed, he is one of the best white-ball spinners. However, I am not sure why Australia has never tried him in Test cricket.
Lyons hold is too strong on that position. Should try him in tandem when they next tour the subcontinent though
 

Adam Zampa pulls out IPL 2024 citing personal reasons​


In a big blow for Rajasthan Royals, Australia spinner Adam Zampa has pulled out of the 2024 season of the Indian Premier League, citing personal reasons. RR will take on Lucknow Super Giants in their IPL 2024 opener at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur on Sunday, March 24.

Zampa was retained by Rajasthan Royals ahead of IPL 2024 mini-auction held in Dubai on a contract worth Rs 1.50 crore.

India Today
 
Drained Zampa looking to rest up for World Cup after IPL withdrawal

Australia spinner Adam Zampa said he withdrew from the Indian Premier League (IPL) because he felt drained after last year's heavy schedule and that he wanted to be rested ahead of the Twenty20 World Cup in June.

Zampa turned out for the Rajasthan Royals in the IPL last year and also played a key role in Australia's triumph at the 50-overs World Cup in India.

He was due to play for the Royals again this season but withdrew last month.

"I think the most important (reason) was the fact that it's a World Cup year and I'm completely drained from 2023," Zampa said on the 'Willow Talk' podcast on Wednesday.

"I did the full IPL last year. The World Cup was three months in India as well. I had the best intentions of trying to play the IPL again this year.

"But once push came to shove, I felt like I just couldn't really offer the Rajasthan Royals the best version of myself and looking forward to the World Cup, that's what's more important to me."

Zampa competed with spinners Yuzvendra Chahal and Ravichandran Ashwin for a place in Rajasthan's squad last season and played just six matches.

The 32-year-old said the uncertainty over his spot in the starting line-up was another reason for his withdrawal.

"It's not like I can say to myself, 'Well, that's alright, I've got 14 games to prepare for a World Cup'," he added.

"I don't know whether that's actually going to be two games or four games or six games. I worked out that maybe putting my family first, putting my body first was better for me."

Australia, seeking their second T20 World Cup title at this year's tournament in the West Indies and the United States, play group matches against Oman, England, Namibia and Scotland before the Super 8s and knockout stages.

REUTERS
 
This is Adam Zampa's stats against Namibia in the group match of the ICC T20 World cup.

Won back-to-back Man of the Match awards now.

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Australian spinner Adam Zampa has become the leading wicket-taker for Australia in ICC T20 World Cup history, surpassing Mitchell Starc. He has taken 31 wickets in 17 matches, with an average of 11.93 while Starc has taken 29 wickets in 22 matches at an average of 24.72.

Zampa also became the first Australian to take 100 wickets in T20 Internationals.
 
Experienced Australia spinner ready for rare Test opportunity

Adam Zampa has been a prolific performer in white-ball internationals for Australia.

Since his international debut in 2016, Adam Zampa has been one of Australia's most successful bowlers in limited-overs cricket with a cumulative record of 274 wickets at an average of 25.58. Zampa also featured prominently in Australia’s recent white-ball global successes, the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2021 (13 wickets at 12.07) and ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2023 (23 wickets at 22.39).

Despite this exceptional run, Zampa has remained a white-ball specialist thus far, with Australia preferring the services of Mitchell Swepson, Ashton Agar, Todd Murphy, and Matthew Kuhnemann to back up Nathan Lyon in Tests in recent years.

However, this does not mean that the door has shut on Zampa. And with the recent edition of Border-Gavaskar tropy just few months away, the spinner retains hope of making it to the Test squad.

“I think, realistically, [I'm] still a chance to play Test cricket. If I was playing a lot of Shield cricket right now with the way I'm bowling, the bowler I am, think I'd be fine, I'd be doing really well. The few games I have played in the last couple of years are suggestive of that,” Zampa told the Final Word podcast.

Some factors that might stand in Zampa’s way are his sporadic first-class appearances (he has played red-ball cricket only twice since 2019) and his average which sits close to 47.

This, however, didn’t bother the 32-year-old, who trusted his bowling to come good in the longest format of the game.

“Even if I do get picked in the upcoming subcontinent tours, people will say, well his record is averaging 46 with the ball. It's not good enough, people will say that I'm sure.

“But if I do get picked I'll know that the way I feel like I'm bowling, it'll be fine.”

One thing that does work in Zampa’s favour is his commitment to Australian international cricket despite being a hot commodity in the T20 franchise market.

“Looking forward, the franchise thing isn't for me. I want to keep playing for Australia as long as I can, the feeling of success in that team is something I want more of.”

It is perhaps for this reason, that Zampa has signed a two-year contract with Cricket Australia.

“I'm lucky enough to have signed a two-year with Australia and it's on the basis of wanting to play every game for Australia. It meant I had to make some decisions around franchise cricket.”

 
Experienced Australia spinner ready for rare Test opportunity

Adam Zampa has been a prolific performer in white-ball internationals for Australia.

Since his international debut in 2016, Adam Zampa has been one of Australia's most successful bowlers in limited-overs cricket with a cumulative record of 274 wickets at an average of 25.58. Zampa also featured prominently in Australia’s recent white-ball global successes, the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2021 (13 wickets at 12.07) and ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2023 (23 wickets at 22.39).

Despite this exceptional run, Zampa has remained a white-ball specialist thus far, with Australia preferring the services of Mitchell Swepson, Ashton Agar, Todd Murphy, and Matthew Kuhnemann to back up Nathan Lyon in Tests in recent years.

However, this does not mean that the door has shut on Zampa. And with the recent edition of Border-Gavaskar tropy just few months away, the spinner retains hope of making it to the Test squad.

“I think, realistically, [I'm] still a chance to play Test cricket. If I was playing a lot of Shield cricket right now with the way I'm bowling, the bowler I am, think I'd be fine, I'd be doing really well. The few games I have played in the last couple of years are suggestive of that,” Zampa told the Final Word podcast.

Some factors that might stand in Zampa’s way are his sporadic first-class appearances (he has played red-ball cricket only twice since 2019) and his average which sits close to 47.

This, however, didn’t bother the 32-year-old, who trusted his bowling to come good in the longest format of the game.

“Even if I do get picked in the upcoming subcontinent tours, people will say, well his record is averaging 46 with the ball. It's not good enough, people will say that I'm sure.

“But if I do get picked I'll know that the way I feel like I'm bowling, it'll be fine.”

One thing that does work in Zampa’s favour is his commitment to Australian international cricket despite being a hot commodity in the T20 franchise market.

“Looking forward, the franchise thing isn't for me. I want to keep playing for Australia as long as I can, the feeling of success in that team is something I want more of.”

It is perhaps for this reason, that Zampa has signed a two-year contract with Cricket Australia.

“I'm lucky enough to have signed a two-year with Australia and it's on the basis of wanting to play every game for Australia. It meant I had to make some decisions around franchise cricket.”


If Australia are playing Lyon, don't think Zampa or another spinner would get a chance.

Maybe in Sydney only.
 
20 - Balls
11 - Dots
4 - Wickets

Oval Invincibles' Adam Zampa spun a web around London Spirit batters in the Hundred.
 
Adam Zampa shines again for Aussies as he claimed 2 wickets while conceding 20 runs in his four overs spell against England in the 1st T20I between England and Australia
 

End of 'incredible run' highlights importance of Zampa​


It was no coincidence the leg-spinner's absence coincided with Australia's first ODI defeat since the early stages of last year's World Cup.

Australia's remarkable ODI win streak came to an end in soggy northern England overnight and if there's one thing their first defeat in 15 matches highlighted, it was the importance of Adam Zampa.

Throughout their 14-game unbeaten run – the second longest in men's ODIs behind the 21 Ricky Ponting's team managed in 2003 – only two players featured in every game: Zampa and Marnus Labuschagne.

Australia were always going to be up against it in Durham on Tuesday with their star leg-spinner a late out due to illness and without another specialist spinner in the 16-player squad.

But as the game unfolded, and England's Harry Brook and Will Jacks built a match-winning third-wicket partnership of 156, Zampa's absence was keenly felt.

The 32-year-old is by some stretch Australia's leading wicket-taker over their past 15 matches with 30 victims.

Twenty-one of those wickets have come in the middle overs (11-40) and has consistently been the bowler summoned by captains Pat Cummins and Mitch Marsh to get a breakthrough.

At Chester-le-Street's Riverside Ground on Tuesday, Brook and Jacks went after spinners Glenn Maxwell and Matt Short, hitting them out the attack and forcing Marsh to bring back star quicks Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood earlier than he would have liked.

They then went after Starc, hitting him for a 19-run over – his third most expensive six-ball set in his ODI career – as the England batters cashed in on batting conditions that became more favourable.

So often across the 14 games prior, Zampa had been the one to break the partnership, going wicketless in just one of those matches.

Zampa was the fifth Australian to miss a match this tour as a virus sweeps through the squad, with Starc, Hazlewood and Maxwell sitting out the ODI series opener in Nottingham last week and Marsh the second T20.

"It's always a different team when Adam Zampa's not there, (he's been) an incredible performer for us over a long period of time," head coach Andrew McDonald said post-match.

"It was a late decision to leave him out, clearly we've had a little bit of illness in the camp so unfortunately he was the latest casualty.

"It's always difficult when you have them moving on you late but the resilience of the group and the way they've performed in the first three matches would say that (the illness) hasn’t been a distraction."

McDonald revealed the winning streak wasn't something they spoke about as a group, but said it was an "incredible run" especially with new players coming into the team over that period.

Across the 14 wins, Australia have introduced Aaron Hardie, Matt Short, Josh Inglis, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Xavier Bartlett and Will Sutherland into the team.

While they've never needed a full-scale reset like their opponents England are openly going through now, McDonald still sees his team evolving.

"We've got the Champions Trophy where we'll be pretty settled in terms of the players that we're looking at for that," he said.

"But there's no doubt you start to forecast for 2027 (ODI World Cup) and some of the players that we're blooding at the moment, we'd like to see them potentially in that transition and become key members of the Australian cricket team.

"And at the moment they're putting their best foot forward."

Allrounders Hardie and Green are two of those players, with fine all-round performances in Durham highlighting their value.

Green helped lay the platform for Australia's 7-304 with 42 in an 84-run partnership with Steve Smith, before Hardie blazed three fours and two sixes in a quickfire 26-ball 44 from No.8 to help the visitors take 104 runs from the final 10 overs.

Then, like Hardie had done in the previous match at Headingley, Green took two crucial wickets and was the bowler that broke the Brook and Jacks stand.

"We saw today Aaron Hardie called into the team late, some critical death hitting there to get us up to a total which I thought was a fantastic effort as a batting unit," McDonald said.

"That work that was done early allowed Alex Carey and Hardie to finish off at the back end … (and) he was definitely impressive.

"The conditions clearly changed across the course of the day and we were up against it early but to manufacture that type of total, there's some real positives (despite the loss)."

 
Most Wickets for Australia in T20Is

117 - Adam Zampa (94 Innings)

79 - Mitchell Starc (65 Innings)
67 - Josh Hazlewood (52 Innings)
66 - Pat Cummins (57 Innings)
49 - Aston Agar (49 Innings)
 
Most Wickets for Australia in T20Is

117 - Adam Zampa (94 Innings)

79 - Mitchell Starc (65 Innings)
67 - Josh Hazlewood (52 Innings)
66 - Pat Cummins (57 Innings)
49 - Aston Agar (49 Innings)

Very underrated LOI bowler.

He has been vital to Aussie LOI success.
 

‘I don’t see it happening’: Zampa’s damning message to aspiring leg-spinners as star opens up on Test omission​


White-ball star Adam Zampa has opened up on his omission from Australia’s Test tour of Sri Lanka, before delivering a message for aspiring leg-spinners around the country.

Despite 201 matches at international level across one-day and T20 cricket, the New South Wales wrist spinner was overlooked as an option for the Aussies later this month on the sub-continent - most likely due to his lack of red-ball cricket in recent years.

Speaking to Fox Cricket ahead of the Big Bash League’s Melbourne Derby between the Stars and his Renegades, the 32-year-old partially cited statistics as to part of the reason he may have been overlooked.

“I don’t think I ever had really high expectations, Zampa begun by saying pre-game at Marvel Stadium.

“When you suss the numbers out between wrist spin and finger spin over there, it definitely leans more towards finger spin … (but) I was still hopeful.”

“That burning desire to play Test cricket was definitely still there – and if anywhere, I thought Sri Lanka was going to be the best option.

“There’s so many good spinners coming through.

“I love watching wrist spin in Test cricket (but) there’s obviously not a lot of it.”

Queensland’s Mitch Swepson is Australia’s most recent wrist spinner to play the five-day format, appearing in four games in 2022. Two of those were in Pakistan, while the other two were ironically in Sri Lanka.

Swepson however is the only genuine leg-spinner to play since Steve Smith back in 2010, when the now-superstar batter was initially selected as a bowling all-rounder. The last out-and-out leg-spinner to play before Swepson was one-Test-wonder Bryce McGain in 2009 at Cape Town in South Africa.

While Zampa was able to understand why finger spinners and off-spinners have been looked upon more favourably in recent times, he does believe there’s definitely still a place for them at the highest red-ball level.

“In that form of the game, when it’s spinning, accuracy is probably the most important thing. And with finger spin, that’s naturally their strength,” Zampa continued.

“But I think the ability to hold up an end when other guys are attacking is also another option they bring to the table as well.

“I don’t know, I wouldn’t say if you’re a young leg spinner coming through, you’ll never play Test cricket. But I think if you were looking to play a lot of Test cricket as a leg spinner, I don’t see it happening.”

Few doubt that Zampa would be strong addition to an Australian touring party of the sub-continent with a red ball. But having played just three Sheffield Shield games in three seasons, his lack of game time across four days at domestic level looks to have resulted in national selectors looking elsewhere.

Veteran Nathan Lyon, Todd Murphy and Matthew Kuhnemann are the three spinners that have been picked to tour Sri Lanka.

 
Most international wickets for Australia as a spinner

Shane Warne - 999
Nathan Lyon - 583
Adam Zampa - 300*
 
Australia's Zampa joins Surrey for four Blast games

Australia leg-spinner Adam Zampa has joined Surrey for the club's next four T20 Blast games.

And should they advance to the knockout phase, Zampa will be available for the quarter-finals and Finals Day later in the season.

The 33-year-old is the Aussies' all-time leading wicket taker in T20 internationals with 117 and is also a World Cup winner in the shortest and 50-over formats.

Zampa has 206 white-ball international caps and has claimed 187 wickets in 11 one-dayers.

"I can't wait to get going for Surrey and to play in front of the Kia Oval crowd once again," he said.

"It's one of the great grounds in the world to play the game and I know how much playing for Surrey means to the lads so I'm looking forward to seeing what it's all about."

Zampa has won the last two editions of the Hundred with the Invincibles, having previously represented Welsh Fire in the competition in 2022, and also played county cricket for Essex in 2018 and 2019.

He has also appeared in the Indian Premier League and Caribbean League.

He will be available for Surrey's upcoming T20 Blast fixtures against Essex, Gloucestershire, Glamorgan and Somerset.

Surrey are currently second in the South group, trailing leaders Somerset by four points.


 
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