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Will Shaun Marsh be better than his father for Australia?

Who'll end up better Geoff Marsh or Shaun Marsh?


  • Total voters
    50

NUFAN

Y no Afghanistan flag
Shaun Marsh has just started his International Career playing his first match for Australia in the Twenty20 match against West Indies.

His stocks have risen so much in the past 6 months, thanks largely to a strong domestic season with WA and then a superb tournament in the IPL.

He's a very good batsmen who I think will end up taking over from Ricky Ponting as Australia's number 3 in the longer form of the game.

Geoff was a terrific opening batsman for Australia in the one day arena. His job of surviving and rotating the strike over was a big key, and he held the record for most ODI 100s for Australia, for quite some time.

In Test Cricket he wasn't as good as he could have been, he's probably remembered most for his century in the Ashes in 1989 where he batted the entire day with Taylor.

Geoff was also a very good fielder in the gully region.

My question is, will Shaun Marsh end up having a better career for Australia [excluding coaching career] than his father?
 
Last edited:

Top_Cat

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Shaun Marsh has just started his International Career playing his first match for Australia in the Twenty20 match against West Indies.

His stocks have risen so much in the past 6 months, thanks largely to a strong domestic season with WA and then a superb tournament in the IPL.

He's a very good batsmen who I think will end up taking over from Ricky Ponting as Australia's number 3 in the longer form of the game.

Geoff was terrific opening batsman for Australia in the one day arena. His job of surviving and rotating the strike over was a big key, and he held the record for most ODI 100s for Australia, for quite some time.

In Test Cricket he wasn't as good as he could have been, he's probably remembered most for his century in the Ashes in 1989 where he batted the entire day with Taylor.

Geoff was also a very good fielder in the gully region.

My question is, will Shaun Marsh end up having a better career Australia [excluding coaching career] than his father?
Shaun plays his shots more than Geoff and probably is stronger on the pull but, contrary to his rep as a grafter, Geoff had them too. He was in the side when the Aussies were struggling so had to reign it in a bit. Difficult to compare, really. He'll have to bat very, very well and for a long period of time. Has the potential to be a pretty decent Test player, especially if he manages to eradicate his tendency to be squared-up on the back-foot. The two are damn-near identical on teh front-foot, though. Check this photo out;



Anyone who's seen them both play tell me that doesn't look like Geoff Marsh batting in front of a mirror.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
Tempted to say yes here. Geoff was a decent Test batsman and filled a hole for Australia for quite a few years but he wasn't in the top echelon by any stretch. I'd be hoping Shaun could better that.

Shaun doesn't have a great First Class record at the moment so I hope he isn't thrust into Test contention for a season or so at least, but he has one of the best techniques in Australian domestic cricket and a vast array of shots to go with it. I think next season will be huge for him and the experience he's getting around the Australian squad at the moment will hopefully be valuable too.

Obviously you can't really say anything definitively at the moment and I expect a whole heap of replies reading "too early to say", but that's what makes a thread like this fun - there's certainly no right answer at the moment.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Shaun plays his shots more than Geoff and probably is stronger on the pull but, contrary to his rep as a grafter, Geoff had them too. He was in the side when the Aussies were struggling so had to reign it in a bit. Difficult to compare, really. He'll have to bat very, very well and for a long period of time. Has the potential to be a pretty decent Test player, especially if he manages to eradicate his tendency to be squared-up on the back-foot. The two are damn-near identical on teh front-foot, though. Check this photo out;



Anyone who's seen them both play tell me that doesn't look like Geoff Marsh batting in front of a mirror.
Woah, woah... Geoff was a right-hander? :blink:

Had always presumed he and Taylor were a left-left combo. How odd.

I've analysed Geoff's career to the nth degree and he was an excellent opening-batsman for quite a while (before being a pretty poor one for another while) but I've never actually seen him bat and had always presumed he stood with the other hand than he does. :mellow:

As to how good is Shaun - don't, yet, have a clue really. Never taken any real note of him.
 

NUFAN

Y no Afghanistan flag
I reckon you've analysed it to about the first degree Richo if you didn't even know what hand he batted with.
 

Burgey

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Like to see Shaun's apparent gifts matched with dad's powers of concerntration - would be special.

Right now I'd settle just for Geoff's catching in the corden TBH.

What struck me watching him and Ronchi the other day in the T20 was, once again, something we've done to death here - the power of modern bats. Seeing guys just play a drive with no follow through and watch it sail over the boundary is crazy.

On topic: he looks the goods, but has to prove himself int he longer forms of the game. I liked his approach to the T11 though - even in that slap-dash stuff he looked a calculating cricketer. Hopefully he kicks on.
 

Perm

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Had to be Rasel. Irrelevant option and a Bangladeshi, couldn't ask for more.
 

Son Of Coco

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Woah, woah... Geoff was a right-hander? :blink:

Had always presumed he and Taylor were a left-left combo. How odd.

I've analysed Geoff's career to the nth degree and he was an excellent opening-batsman for quite a while (before being a pretty poor one for another while) but I've never actually seen him bat and had always presumed he stood with the other hand than he does. :mellow:

As to how good is Shaun - don't, yet, have a clue really. Never taken any real note of him.
It was obviously to the nth-1 degree if you don't know which side of the bat he stood on! :happy:
 

howardj

International Coach
Safe to say he has more shots than his old man.

Swampy has a bludger of a Test record IIRC. That he played so many games is a damning commentary on where Australian cricket was at in the 1980s.
 

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