Refreshed Marcus Harris prepares to make his Ashes case

The opener admitted to be being worn out after a home season which included his first taste of Test cricket and knows nothing is guaranteed about an Ashes berth

Alex Malcolm04-Jul-2019Even prior to David Warner’s barnstorming return in the World Cup, Marcus Harris knew the two opening spots available for Australia in the first Ashes Test at Edgbaston would be reduced to one.While Harris impressed in his first international summer against an outstanding India attack, he walked away without the defining innings to show for it. He reached 20 in six of his first seven Test innings but made only two half-centuries with a highest score of 79. Slim pickings against a comparatively gentler Sri Lanka attack left him frustrated but he knows no matter what he might have done, Warner’s return was always a certainty.”I’m not sure he’s nipping at my heels, I’m pretty sure he’s there,” Harris said. “He’s probably the best opening batter of my generation. Just to watch the way he played, how he took it on against other sides and how consistent he was.”Warner has been the most successful opener in Test cricket since 2013 with 5341 runs at 49.91 including 18 hundreds – seven ahead of the next best of M Vijay’s 11 hundreds. However Harris, an incredibly pragmatic character, doesn’t see Warner’s return to the Test side as a door closing in his face.”If I had the opportunity to play with him it will be a great learning experience to watch the way he goes about it and how he takes on other teams,” Harris said. “I don’t see it as a hindrance, I see it more as an opportunity to learn from someone who’s probably the best, in my opinion, at that position. And I think the Australian cricket team will be better for having him back in the side.”Harris arrived in England earlier this week to join the Australia A team for the red-ball section of the tour in the lead up to the Ashes. While most of the potential Ashes squad have been playing cricket in England, either in the World Cup, with the Australia A one-day side or an English county, Harris has had to make do with the indoor centre at the Junction Oval in cold, wintery Melbourne, save for a week-long camp in Brisbane at the start of last month.”You make the most of what you’ve got but it’s not outdoor nets, out in the sun,” Harris said.