George Bailey has stood down as Australia's Twenty20
captain to focus on his World Cup preparation and increase his chances of a Test
recall by playing more first-class cricket for Tasmania.
Bailey has also made
himself unavailable for Australia's upcoming T20s against Pakistan in the UAE
and at home against South Africa, although he has not retired from the format.
Australia are expected to announce their squads for the UAE tour on Monday and
a new T20 captain will be required after Bailey held the job for the past two
and a half years.
"It just made me
reflect a little bit on where my priorities lay for the next three or four
years and what I want to get out of my career," Bailey said of his
reaction when he first saw this summer's fixture. "It's only going to buy
me another couple of Shield games this year but longer term it just was
something that I wanted to do in terms of working harder on my four-day
cricket.
"I know I was
picked out of one-day cricket for my last opportunity to play Test cricket and
I don't think that would happen again. I think the only way is through
Sheffield Shield or first-class runs. The best chance for me to do that is to
play as many Shield games as I can."
Bailey, 32, was one of
the beneficiaries of Australia's change of selectors in 2011-12, when the new
chairman John Inverarity named him as the new T20 captain despite having never
played an international match. His tactical nous was viewed as a key asset by
Inverarity, who was keen for Australia to push up the T20 rankings from their
place at No.5.
His emergence as an
international player led to him becoming a key ODI batsman for Australia and
making his Test debut during last summer's home Ashes, when he played all five
Tests in Australia's clean-sweep. However, although he made useful Ashes
contributions he did not manage a century and was dropped for the tour of South
Africa that followed.
"I've thoroughly
enjoyed the responsibility and honour of leading Australia in T20
internationals," Bailey said. "Over the last couple of months I have
had the opportunity to reflect on my role as T20 captain and the direction I
want to take my cricket over the next few years. Personally, I want to focus on
my one-day cricket as well as becoming the best long-form player I can."
Bailey will leave the
captaincy with Australia still at No.5, having won exactly half of the 28 T20s
in which he has led the side. He captained Australia to two World T20 campaigns
but they were unable to reach a final in either of them, although that had more
to do with Australia's struggles in the spinning conditions of Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh than Bailey's leadership.
Just as Australia's
first T20 squad during Inverarity's tenure as chairman of selectors installed
Bailey as captain, the first T20 squad named by new chairman Rod Marsh will
need to include a different captain. Aaron Finch, Shane Watson and David Warner
could be candidates to lead Australia in their one-off game against Pakistan,
although going back to Bailey's predecessor, Cameron White, is another option.
"George is a fine
leader and will certainly leave big shoes to fill as Australia's T20
captain," James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia CEO, said. "I'd
like to thank him for his efforts in captaining the country in the shortest
form of the game. He is an excellent ambassador for Australian cricket,
displaying great leadership and setting a positive example for younger players
around the country.
"He should be very
proud of these achievements. We fully respect his decision to step aside from
the international T20 captaincy and look forward to seeing him continue his
one-day international career as well as playing more first-class cricket. We
also wish him all the best in his endeavours to play more Test cricket."
In his 28 Twenty20s for
his country, Bailey has scored 470 runs at 26.11. He remains an important ODI
player for Australia and should feature at the World Cup, having been Australia's leading ODI run scorer since the end of the 2011 World Cup
with 1772 runs at 49.22.
Ref: http://www.espncricinfo.com/australia/content/current/story/778695.html
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