Australia’s decision to play Alex Carey as a specialist batter while handing the wicketkeeping gloves to Josh Inglis failed its first test, as both players fell cheaply during a calamitous collapse against South Africa. The middle-order reshuffle did little to prevent a 98-run defeat in Cairns.
The team management opted for a deeper batting lineup, hoping Carey’s experience would bolster the middle order. However, both he and Inglis became victims of Keshav Maharaj’s mesmerizing spell, dismissed for single-figure scores after playing ill-judged shots under pressure.
Their cheap dismissals were part of a wider collapse that saw Australia lose six wickets for 29 runs. After a strong start at 0-60 chasing 297, the inability of the middle order, including the Carey-Inglis combination, to consolidate proved fatal to the home team’s chances.
While captain Mitch Marsh scored a brilliant 88, the failure of the specialist batter experiment was a glaring issue. The move did not provide the intended stability, leaving Australia to reconsider their team balance ahead of the second ODI.
