Australian stars struck down by illness ahead of England clash

Three big names are doubtful starters for Australia’s ODI opener against England on Thursday night.

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Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood are doubtful starters for Australia’s ODI opener against England, as illness threatens to seriously weaken the team turning out in Nottingham on Thursday night. A virus that kept Mitchell Marsh out of the second Twenty20 against England in Cardiff and also affected his stand-in Travis Head has moved elsewhere through the squad, leaving Maxwell, Starc and Hazlewood in particular doubt, according to reports out of the UK. This is how we do it: Glenn Maxwell and Mitchell Starc celebrate a wicket.

Credit: AP “We’re still working through that, but we’ll have 11 on the park,” Marsh said when asked how many players were fit for the series opener. “It’s certainly a busy schedule, and there will be times where we may have to manage guys through. Playing five games in 10 days is certainly a big ask, but we’ll manage that as best we can and make sure we’re fielding teams to win this series.



” Loading Hazlewood missed the second T20 as part of his management plan for the autumn tour. The T20 series was tied 1-1 after rain washed out the decider in Manchester. Josh Inglis and Jake Fraser-McGurk, who looked proppy after slipping over in the field in Cardiff, are also carrying niggles.

Inglis’ quad trouble means Alex Carey is likely to play his first white-ball game for Australia since he was dropped early in the victorious 2023 World Cup campaign. Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne are set to return to Australian colours after their winter breaks, while Adam Zampa will play a meritorious 100th 50-over game for Australia as one of the world’s most respected white ball spinners. One player almost certain not to play despite the illness and injury concerns is the 19-year-old fast bowler Mahli Beardman , who is still recovering from his long-haul journey to Nottingham from Perth.

“He’s a ripping young kid, he’s on standby at this point in time, but for a young kid he’s certainly got a lot of talent,” Marsh said of Beardman. “He showed that throughout the under-19 World Cup, and I think he’s going to learn a lot by being here over the next couple of weeks. “I’ve certainly faced him in the nets a few times and we’ve seen over the history of Australian cricket, we’ve got a long list of guys who’ve been plucked I guess out of nowhere, but Mahli’s extremely talented, he bowls fast and I’m rapt to have him here.

” Sean Abbott, Ben Dwarshuis (a reinforcement in place of the injured Nathan Ellis) and Aaron Hardie are all likely starters for Australia, alongside Cameron Green. England will be led by the young Yorkshireman Harry Brook with Jos Buttler out injured, while Jofra Archer will play his first 50-over games in 18 months as part of a careful return to longer form cricket after a litany of injuries. “We’re going to have the same principles [so it is a case of] trying to put that forward to the team already before Baz takes over,” Brook said of a white-ball group now mentored by Brendon McCullum, who was named as all-format England coach earlier this month following his Test match success in tandem with Ben Stokes.

“Me and Tres [interim coach Marcus Trescothick] are both on the same page to Baz, we want to go out there and entertain the crowd, take the game on, try to take wickets and put the pressure on their bowlers. And in the field, chase down every ball and just try to influence the game as much as you can.” News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport are sent every Monday.

Sign up for our Sport newsletter . Save Log in , register or subscribe to save articles for later. License this article Australian cricket ODI Cricket Australia England Daniel Brettig is The Age's chief cricket writer and the author of several books on cricket.

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