Baby over baggy green Ashes hopeful Abbott to put family first
Itâs the ultimate dilemma for an aspiring Test cricketer: baby or the baggy green? But as far as Sean Abbott is concerned, his mind is made up.
Playing Test cricket for Australia was a childhood dream for Abbott but he will put the possibility of a Boxing Day Test debut on ice to be at the birth of his and partner Brierâs first baby. In fact, the decision was not hard at all.
âI donât think thatâs actually a question,â Abbott told the Herald and The Age.
Allan Border was famously batting during the Sydney Test in 1986 when the scoreboard broadcast a message congratulating him on the birth of daughter Nicole that afternoon. Times, however, have changed.
The big three of Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc remain Australiaâs first-choice pace attack but with five Tests in six weeks, selectors have indicated a rotation policy is on the cards â" unlike last season in the defeat to India.
Should the practice, used with great effect during Australiaâs Ashes defence in 2019, be reinstated, the door would be wide open for Abbott to debut. Western Australiaâs Jhye Richardson and perennial drinks waiter Michael Neser are also in the frame.
â[Iâm] not going to risk putting into jeopardy the Ashes series by coming in as not a âcleanâ athlete,â Abbott said.
âItâs not as easy as it used to be and thatâs the world weâre living in at the minute. Thatâs just part of things now.
âItâs a bloody tough one, especially considering the safety concerns around COVID and borders.
âItâs certainly something Iâll have to keep a close eye on and play well enough to get selected. Should that happen I have to make sure Iâm back in Sydney late December for the birth of my baby girl.
âWeâll just have to manage that as best I can and if that means maybe missing some time with the Test squad and an Ashes series then so be it. Hopefully, we get lucky and things work out.â
Opportunities for Australiaâs fringe paceman have been scarce due to the form and durability of first-choice trio Cummins, Hazlewood and Starc.
Of the past 38 Tests, stretching back to the start of 2017, only four other quicks have worn the baggy green: Peter Siddle (five Tests), Pattinson (four), Richardson (two) and Chadd Sayers (one).
Abbott, who has been in domestic ranks for 11 years for nine internationals, may well be passing up the only chance he gets at Test level â" but he does not see it that way.
âAs much as itâs a dream of mine; Iâm not 30 yet, my bodyâs going great, Iâm feeling really fit, itâs not going to be my last game of cricket,â Abbott said.
âI know opportunities donât come around very often, especially with the guys we have in the squad that have been playing, but itâs the birth of my first child.
âHopefully it works out that she times her run nicely that we can tick all those boxes and have dreams come true in more ways than one.â
After several false starts, Abbott gets his first opportunity to push his Test claims in the Sheffield Shield on Wednesday, when his NSW side takes on another late starter Victoria at Drummoyne Oval.
Abbott enjoyed his best Shield campaign last season with bat and ball, claiming 21 wickets at 29 along with 570 runs at 63. He knows he has to maintain those standards to break into the Test side.
âThe three quicks who have been playing for Australia are building strong cases to be part of the greatest cricketers weâve had for our country with the ball â" theyâre still very much there and bowling well,â Abbott said.
âI donât feel any closer because it doesnât really change what I have to do, and thatâs take as many wickets as I can whenever I bowl.â
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