Star Australian all-rounder Cameron Green.Credit:Getty Images
While he was ruled out of this week’s opening Sheffield Shield round and is highly unlikely to appear in round two,there is the possibility of Green turning out as a batter for Australia A against India A in a game at the MCG in early November.
Regardless of his all-round status,the 25-year-old Green is seen as the youthful centrepiece of an ageing top six against India,as evidenced by his move up to number four following David Warner’s retirement last summer.Steve Smith’s switch to opener was made partly to accommodate Green.
With five Tests tightly packed into little more than six weeks from late November,the change-bowling slack will need to be taken up by Mitch Marsh,who has been working up his fitness on a program geared for that purpose.
Nathan Lyon can also be expected to bowl heavy-duty overs for Australia,and has the benefit of excellent records in Perth,Adelaide and Brisbane where the first three Tests are to be played.
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Former Australian team doctor Peter Brukner said that a back stress injury for Green would not prevent him from batting or fielding in Test matches once any initial pain had subsided and the bone began to heal.Green felt discomfort in his back after the third ODI against England in Durham,and after scans in London caught the first available plane home to Perth.
“As soon as there’s any hint of back pain at all,they whip them off for an MRI and see whether there’s any bone edema,which is the first sign there’s some stress there,” Brukner told this masthead. “That shows up fairly early in the process,so if you pick that up it’s an opportunity to back them off,rather than pushing through it until it gets to a fracture.”