Australian national selector George Bailey has said that the national team plans to move on from the recently-retired David Warner despite the southpaw’s desire to be considered for the Champions Trophy in Pakistan next year. The 37-year-old Warner retired from international cricket following the T20 World Cup in the Americas last month, where the Aussies failed to progress beyond the Super 8 stage. However, he had insisted that he will keep the door open for a return for the Champions Trophy, a One-Day International format ICC event.
“Our understanding is that David is retired, and [he] should be commended on what has been an incredible career across all three formats. Certainly, our planning is that he won’t be there in Pakistan,” Bailey was quoted as saying by ESPNCricinfo.
Warner had a decent run during the T20 World Cup, finishing as the side’s second-highest run-scorer, after Travis Head.
On his remarks on making a comeback during the Champions Trophy, Bailey said that Warner might be “stirring the pot”, with the team planning “to transition to some different players”.
“You never know when Bull’s joking…think he’s just stirring the pot a bit. He’s had a wonderful career, can’t celebrate it enough, and think as time goes by, his legacy of what he has done for Australia and we reflect back on that, the legend of a player is only going to continue to grow,” added Bailey.
“But, as far as this team goes and the journey to transition to some different players, in his case across all three formats, it’s going to be exciting.” The Australians will have a young squad during their upcoming tour of the United Kingdom, which includes limited-overs meetings against Scotland and England.
With the likes of Matthew Wade, Mitchell Starc and Glenn Maxwell missing out, Bailey said the Kangaroos might see a more youthful squad going forward, with an eye on the next T20 World Cup in 2026.
“I don’t think there’s anyone who’s not there that we’ve put a line through permanently besides David (Warner). This is the way we are going with this squad,” he continued.
“The next T20 World Cup is 2026, so I imagine there may be some more changes than what we are seeing in this squad. But specifically, to those guys (Starc and Maxwell), no we haven’t had any conversations about where they think their T20 journey may finish.
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