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This article was first published 10 years ago

Plenty of life in us old dogs, says Australia's Harris

December 20, 2013 10:21 IST

Image: Ryan Harris (centre) celebrates
Photographs: Robert Cianflone/Getty Images

Australia's Ashes triumph has been cast as a fairytale swansong for an ageing team, but 34-year-old paceman Ryan Harris has urged selectors not to pension off the greybeards needlessly.

Six of the 11 that trounced England in three straight matches to win back the coveted urn are over 30, and Australia may bring a very different team for the next Ashes in 2015.

Former coach Mickey Arthur, who was sacked before the first of the back-to-back Ashes series in England, cast doubt on the longevity of some of the players, including 32-year-old captain Michael Clarke, who is managing a back condition.

"I read Mickey Arthur's comments about the need to rebuild, and I don't really want to get into it because I don't want to start another furore. But I think he's wrong," Harris said in a column published by Melbourne's The Age newspaper on Friday.

"If you're older and you're good enough to play at this level, then you should be picked.

"If you nick off all your old blokes, who are the younger ones going to learn from?"

Plenty of life in us old dogs, says Australia's Harris

Image: Ryan Harris
Photographs: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

Australia's selectors have traditionally been the whipping boys of a feisty local media, but were universally slammed for dumping opening batsman Simon Katich at the age of 35 after he suffered an injury during the 2010-11 Ashes series.

His anointed replacement Phillip Hughes, 13 years his junior, failed to cement his place despite being handed multiple chances.

A litany of injuries has forced Harris to take time to accumulate his 19 test appearances, but his excellent form in the Ashes, as the leading wicket-taker in the northern series and 12 wickets Down Under, has justified selectors' patience with his fitness troubles.

Harris is still battling to recover from a knee injury but said his surgeon was "shocked" at how well he was progressing.

"I don't know what's going to happen with my knee," he said.

"I play every test like it's my last. I know the end is close but whether it's next week after the Melbourne test or whether it's in two years, I don't know."

Australia play England in the fourth Test in Melbourne starting on December 26.

Source: REUTERS
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