78
0
Tim David has admitted that he has no imminent plans to play List A cricket to improve his case for an ODI recall, despite recent changes in Australia’s 50-over establishment due to the retirement of important senior players.
The 29-year-old has been a fixture in Australia’s T20 team since 2022, and while selectors hope his explosive skills will convert to the 50-over format, David is not actively looking for domestic opportunities to push for inclusion.
David was selected for four one-day internationals in South Africa in 2023, prior of the World Cup in India, while Glenn Maxwell was injured.
David has only played one One-Day Cup match for Tasmania, in November 2021, and has not had a domestic contract in Australia since his rookie listing with Western Australia in the 2017-18 season, before representing Singapore internationally. His last 50-over match at any level was the ODI he played in 2023.
Despite signing with the Hobart Hurricanes for two more Big Bash League (BBL) seasons, David remains committed to T20 cricket. With the recent retirements of Maxwell, Marcus Stoinis, and Steven Smith, Australia’s ODI team is in transition and looking for new finishing alternatives. However, David has clarified that, while he has had meetings with personal mentors, he has no current plans to pursue ODI selection through domestic 50-over cricket.
“Definitely having conversations in the background with my coaches and people I want to talk to about my game right now.” I am not sure, to be honest. This is not the near plan. We’ve had a very hectic year, to be honest, leading up to this T20 World Cup,” David told.
“This year’s winter appears really different to me. Previously, I would have spent four or five months away over the winter playing competitions. And with so many T20 series, there’s not much time to worry about anything else. So we’ll see how that progresses. But at the time, I have no intentions,” he said.
David is currently undergoing rehabilitation for a hamstring injury in Perth as he prepares for Australia’s upcoming T20I tour of the Caribbean, which begins on July 20 in Jamaica.
The power-hitter has been sidelined since sustaining the injury during the IPL, where he played a crucial role in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s (RCB) historic title-winning campaign, the franchise’s first, despite missing the playoffs due to the setback.
David was initially scheduled to return to competitive cricket in the upcoming Global T20 Guyana tournament, representing the Hobart Hurricanes. However, his recovery has taken slightly longer than expected, ruling him out of the tournament’s start on Thursday.
“Initially, that was the plan, especially once the Hurricanes had a team in the GSL. Unfortunately, the injury and just the nature of it was going to be a pretty tight time schedule. And I’ve probably got a couple of things that I need to tick off with the CA guys when I get over to Jamaica just before they’re fully comfortable, but I’m feeling confident. And unfortunately, just the timeframe of what those recoveries look like the GSL was, it was tough for me to get up,” David said.
Australia is gearing up for a packed T20I schedule, beginning with a five-match series in the Caribbean, followed by a three-match home series against South Africa in Darwin and Cairns. This streak of eight consecutive T20Is will lead up to a three-match ODI series against South Africa.
The team will then head to New Zealand for a three-match T20I series in early October, before hosting India for five T20Is in late October and early November.
David, currently recovering from a hamstring injury, will not feature in The Hundred due to scheduling conflicts with the South Africa series. However, he is set to return to the Caribbean Premier League (CPL), rejoining the St. Lucia Kings once his rehab is complete.
The squads for the South Africa series are yet to be announced, but David is already in the Caribbean, where he is joined by fellow Hobart Hurricanes teammate Mitchell Owen. Owen is poised to make his T20I debut for Australia following impressive performances in the BBL and Major League Cricket (MLC) for Washington Freedom.
“Excited to see him go. He’s been playing very well over there in the US. We’ve obviously seen what he did last year for the Hurricanes, and that’s an exciting period for him. He’s playing confident cricket. And as a teammate and someone who’s seen him growing, we want to keep encouraging that. So exciting time for him,” David said.
David has officially re-signed with the Hobart Hurricanes for the next two seasons, putting an end to speculation about his future in the BBL. There were rumours that David might be on the move after he was not listed among the Hurricanes’ 10 mandatory pre-signed players ahead of the BBL free agency period earlier this year. However, he has clarified that he was never considering a departure, despite the gap in finalising the deal.
“The biggest reason for the delay is the new 10-player rule. So that obviously just added a little bit of complexity to getting that done with our 10 spots fully filled. There wasn’t any uncertainty [for me]. There was a little bit of uncertainty in the fact that there were media articles saying that I was leaving and I was copping from the hill a little bit. That’s just the nature of how it is,” David said.
“You’ve got to keep it to yourself. But there was always good communication throughout that period with people making decisions at Cricket Tasmania and the Hurricanes. So a little bit frustrating that that was kind of the narrative around the period of finals when it wasn’t really a starter for me,” he concluded.
Download Our App
For a better experience: Download the CricketMood app from the ios and Google Play Store
0 Likes
© 2013 - 2024 CricketMood All rights reserved.