SYDNEY, Oct 7 (AFP) - Exciting young Australian
batting talent Michael Clarke’s debut Test century has put the
heat on experienced batsman Darren Lehmann to keep his place in
the series against India, Australian Test great Doug Walters
said Thursday.
The 23-year-old right-hander became the 12th
Australian to make a hundred on Test debut in the first
Bangalore Test against India on Thursday.
Clarke gained his first Test cap when a
fractured thumb forced Test skipper Ricky Ponting to miss the
opening two Tests of the four-match India series.
Ponting’s return for the third Nagpur Test from
October 26-30 will now put mounting pressure on Australia’s Test
selectors as to who should make way for Ponting.
"He’s a very good player — has been for a long,
long time — and it’s taken the selectors, unfortunately, a long
time to find him," Walters said of Clarke on Thursday.
Walters said it could be time for the selectors
to move the 34-year-old Lehmann aside in favour of the
burgeoning talents of younger batsmen, particularly Clarke.
"You can’t consistently keep on dropping 37,
38-year-old blokes from (the team) and replacing them with
36-year-old guys," Walters said on radio.
"I’ve got nothing against Darren Lehmann, I
think he’s a fantastic player.
"He’s done a fantastic job for Australia, but
the way he batted yesterday, I think his (Test career) might be
short-lived."
Lehmann chanced his luck in a streaky 17 to put
Australia in early trouble before Clarke and stand-in skipper
Adam Gilchrist restored the first innings.
Ponting is the only regular batsman in the
Australian team in his 20s and he turns 30 on December 19.
National selector and former Test skipper Allan
Border said he felt vindicated by Clarke’s performance and said
he was a better player than his modest first class statistics
suggested.
"I think this kid offers something special,
forget the stats, there is just something about him," Border
said here before the start of Thursday’s second day.