Article
Brett Lee Points Out The Next Big Thing For The Australian Cricket
By CricShots - Oct 10, 2018 7:21 pm
Views 65

The three top-quality batsmen Steve Smith, David Warner, and Cameron Bancroft are currently serving bans, and the team hasn’t been able to find the right space. Instead of this, the Australian management has already handed maiden Test caps to three promising players – Aaron Finch, Travis Head and Marnus Labuschagne for the ongoing first Test against Pakistan in Dubai.

lee
Jake Weatherald

In the current scenario, the former fast bowler Brett Lee pointed out that the young batsman Jake Weatherald could be the next big thing in Australian cricket. Though, the 23-year-old Jake doesn’t carry great numbers at his back but surely is in the eyes of Brett Lee.

ALSO READ: Justin Langer strongly believes Smith and Warner can return to the Australian squad

Lee reckons that Jake will feature in the Australian squad soon which can turn out to be ‘this season’. During an interview with ICC official site, the veteran said, “Jake Weatherald. Now, remember that name. He will definitely play cricket for Australia at some stage. I hope it’s this season. Left-handed batsman takes on the quicks – yes, he took down Billy Stanlake, he hit balls off his nose that was like hook shots, out of the stadium at North Sydney Oval. This guy’s a freak. Twenty-three years of age – Jake Weatherald, he is the future of Australian cricket.”

billy
Billy Stanlake

Weatherald has still not put up really big numbers in what has been a short career so far, but he has shown the hunger to score big runs, with three centuries in first-class cricket, and three-digit scores in List A as well as T20 cricket as well. Brett also talked about Billy Stanlake, who has already played six one-day internationals and 12 Twenty20 Internationals, he said, “He would definitely play a lot more cricket for Australia this summer.”

In the current circumstances, it will not be a surprise if Billy and Weatherald actually get a long run. It will be interesting to see if Lee and Australian Board are on the same page.