
White ball cricket is very different to red ball cricket.
There’s the strikingly obvious matters such as the length of a match or the colour of a players clothing.
More subtly, if you scratch just a little deeper, other vagaries separate the two.
For example, white ball cricket is more open to taking the risk on all rounders. A good all rounder has a tough time in Test cricket. They are expected to make centuries with the bat and take 5 fers with the ball.
How many have really made it in the history of the game?
Kapil, Imran, Hadlee, Botham, Sobers, Kallis….. we would struggle to name ten.
In white ball cricket, all rounders have a different purpose. They just need to have impact. A pacey 40 here or two quick wickets there. The game tolerates a different view of success.
Concurrently, no matter how good a white ball player you are, it is your red ball statistics and performances that will define your career.
Michael Bevan was a freakish ODI batsman. The world’s original “Finisher”. A Shield batting average well over fifty.
Yet a legacy that rarely pops up in “greatest ever player” discussions. Why? Because his Test record is perceived as weak.
And this is where many struggle with Shane Watson.
Traditional views attempting to define a non traditional cricketer.
Watson burst onto the scene as that talented kid who would take all before him. Tall, shoulders wider than the wingspan of a jumbo jet, blonde hair and a leaky emotional side.
We expected a blend of Lance Kluesner’s brutality and Terry Alderman’s cunningness.
In the early days, we received glimpses of it on numerous occasions.
However, most times we simply got injury.
It frustrated Shane. It frustrated us.
As a white ball player, he stands amongst Australia’s elite.
Bevan, Gilchrist, Warne, McGrath, Jones, Ponting, Watson.
Two World Cup victories and ICC Twenty20 Player of the Tournament in 2012.
He’s won games off his own bat. He’s dried up the runs with the ball. He’s probably never even dropped a ball at 1st slip.
He’s done it all and done it well.
Watson is one of the fellas who makes the team sheet look stronger.
He brings a presence. In this regard he is Gayle, Dhoni and Afridi.
His doubters will point to a sooky demeanour when things aren’t going his way, his use of DRS and Homeworkgate.
But this is all red ball malarkey. He retired from that version of the game after the last Ashes series. The analysis of that part of his legacy has already been written.
Those same traits, when you look objectively at it, don’t exist when he was playing with the white ball.
Perhaps the shorter versions of the game steeled his focus. Less time in which to ponder failure? Just get out there and hit it.
It can be argued that the purest way to define someone’s current white ball worth is their IPL auction price. A ruthless machine that has no time for sympathy, emotion or reputation.
Shane Watson just sold for circa USD $1 million at the most recent circus. Not many others did.
The market has spoken.
Australia has a flood of all rounders looking to take Watson’s place in Australia’s white ball line ups.
Mitch Marsh, Maxwell, Faulkner, Coulter Nile and Moises Henriques.
But do any of these give the same sense of security that the name Shane Watson gave?
Not yet they don’t.
You can replace the role he played, but it is so much harder to replace his impact.
Originally posted on First Post Follow @denniscricket_
Always glad to see the back of Watson when playing us because of his frightening potential. That it frequently came with the added bonus of comedic brilliance to rival Buster Keaton was a beautiful bonus. Another enjoyable article, thanks.