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“He’s Eager To Continue On At This Stage” – Andrew McDonald On David Warner’s Test Future

Andrew McDonald

ALICE SPRINGS, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 11: Andrew McDonald of the Bushrangers celebrates victory during the Sheffield Shield match between Victoria and Western Australia at Traeger Park on March 11, 2017 in Alice Springs, Australia. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Australia’s opening batter David Warner’s decision regarding his Test future has caught attention after an under-par performance in the recently concluded series against the West Indies. However, Australian head coach Andrew McDonald is confident about David Warner’s future in the longest format of the game.

David Warner had hinted at calling time on his Test career last month as he could not see himself playing red-ball cricket beyond another 12 months for Australia. But another poor series against the West Indies has raised question marks about him in the longest format of the game.

Head coach Andrew McDonald has revealed that David Warner is not thinking about retirement as of yet and wants to play the longest format.

“He’s eager to continue on at this stage. He has not hinted [at] anything else. His appetite for the work – in and around training – is still there. He’s busy at the crease, and you’ve seen signs that he is going well.

“He’s just found different ways to get out, and sometimes that can happen. We are building towards a World Test Championship [final], and he wants to be part of that. So that’s a clear focus for us, and we’ve got South Africa as a part of that. And then on to India,” Andrew McDonald said ahead of the Test series against South Africa.

“He’s firmly in our thoughts for India” – Andrew McDonald on David Warner

Australia will play three Tests against South Africa at home. Andrew McDonald feels that David Warner will be up for the challenge in the series and won’t be distracted by the off-field controversy in regard to his leadership ban.

He last scored a century in Tests in 2020 and has scored just scored only 675 runs at 28.12 in 25 Test innings since then.

“We’ll see what happens in the next three Test matches. But at this stage, he’s firmly in our thoughts for India. He’s great at compartmentalizing, [and] separating the off-field from the on-field. And I think most of the great champions do that very well. I sense this situation is not different,” the Australian head coach added.


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