Bit revisionist. That 'joke' player came back into the side after a 3-year break and scored a ton against a strong WI attack in Adelaide after having his thumb broken by Donald in his first Test (had 3948629423 catches dropped off him in that knock against the WI, but). Then, a couple of months later, he fronted up against South Africa again, now number 2 and with a great pace attack to boot. No pressure.
Firstly that ton vs WI was one of the most unconvincing centuries ever & probably the most unconvincing i have seen in my time of watching cricket.
A made a slight mistake with the first time period. I meant SA 94 - WI 2000, where looked a woeful test player. I even & many thought Elliot was the better player ATT.
Hayden struggled a bit but so did Taylor. With the impending Ashes tour, Elliott was in form and obviously they weren't going to drop Taylor, despite woeful form, so they dropped Hayden from the touring squad and picked Slater as the reserve opener. Not on the basis of a fairly unspectacular Shield season that year but because he'd done well on the previous tour pretty much. The ironic part? There were questions (unfairly, tbh) about Hayden's mental stability/strength when compared to Slater. Rumours at the time suggest Taylor just preferred Slater and he was obviously going to get a sympathetic hearing from Simpson come selection time.
There were (legitimate) questions about Hayden's ability to turn over the strike back then too and certainly Slater was just considered the better bat (I know I thought so at the time, mainly because I like really attacking players). Taking him on tour was a way to get him back into the set-up as a good backup for Taylor/Elliott but still, don't think Hayden wasn't given much of a chance to show what he had to offer. QLD'ers definitely felt, with som justification, that he was shafted because Australia just didn't want to make the hard choice to drop Taylor and give the captaincy to Waugh.
Yes all true & i dont deny these factual circumstances. Only thing i'd qustion is even if the unthinkable had occured circa 97 when Tubby had his struggleds & was dropped for Hayden. I question whether he would have been dominant or as complete a batsman like he was from India 2001 to SRI 2004. Since as you should know, he couldn't play spin like he did post 2001 as he did during the 94-2000 period. He stated in learnt to play spin which made him so dominant in IND 2001, due to trip he went with some AUS academey team or something of the sort in the late 90s, which improved his batting vs spin. So he probably would have failed if he was the main opener in India 98 & SRI 99, then who knows maybe he would been banised to domestic cricket forever. Or probably most likely got his chance back in the AUS test team in the middle of the 2000s era instead of a recall vs NZ 2000.
This is why putting all those speculations of what could have been with Hayden in the 90s a side as a test cricketer & his domestic battting on a green brisbane deck againts quality state attacks. The safest guide we have is what he did as a test cricketer during his peak from IND 2001 - SRI 2004, in which he was a FTB. Although i accept he adapted to a FTB due to joke attacks around.
He then struggled in Ashes 01, Ashes 05, Akhat/Mills 04, just like he did vs SA & WI in 90s to quality bowling who exposed his technical flaws. To replicate his ability he showed in domestic cricket to bat againts the moving ball for reasons you said here (which i have always accepted):
quote said:
Hayden, when he was dominating domestic cricket in the early/mid 90's, was always an extremely patient player, solid as a rock in defense and not really a fast scorer. Preferred to wait for the right ball than just work the ball around, similar zones to Phil Jaques. Made him a bit limited for the top level and goes some way to explaining why he wasn't picked for so long.
Putting more shots into his game gave him more scoring opportunities but also gave the opposition more to work with and, for a bit, he struggled to find that compromise between the patient game he had and wanting to score quickly too, especially since those shots and working the ball around more got him into the Test side.
Only until his Oval 05 hundred, runs vs SA 05/06, IND 07/08. Was that patient style of batting seen from Hayden in tests. Which is why i always pick him in my AUS ATXI, since i he showed that key adaptability, that alot of other FTBs in the 2000s era didn't.. Which makes me feel if the post Ashes 05 Hayden would have been a very solid opener if he had to face quality pace bowling consistently.