Xavier Bartlett Eyes Test Cap, Learns from Aussie Pace Trio

Punjab Kings and Australian pacer Xavier Bartlett has set his sights on earning a Test cap for Australia. He is learning from the legendary pace trio of Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, and Mitchell Starc. Bartlett is focusing on improving his defensive bowling and batting to secure a place in the Test side. The 27-year-old has impressed in limited-overs cricket, including a standout ODI record of 15 wickets at an average of 11.13.

Key Points: Xavier Bartlett on Test Ambitions, Learning from Cummins, Hazlewood, Starc

  • Bartlett aims for Test cap with Australia
  • Learning from Cummins, Hazlewood, Starc trio
  • Working on defensive bowling and batting skills
  • Impressive ODI record with 15 wickets at avg 11.13
  • PBKS on unbeaten run in IPL 2025
4 min read

PBKS, Australia pacer Bartlett speaks on Test ambitions, learning from 'Big Three' pace trio of Cummins, Hazlewood, Starc

PBKS pacer Xavier Bartlett discusses his Test cricket goals, learning from Australia’s “Big Three” pace trio, and improving his defensive bowling and batting skills.

"You grow up wanting to play Test cricket for Australia and get that Baggy Green. - Xavier Bartlett"

New Delhi, April 23

Punjab Kings and Australian pacer Xavier Bartlett said that he has been working on his defensive bowling skillset and batting as the Aussie bowling line-up prepares to enter a transition phase within the next few years, with earning the prestigious Baggy Green cap for Aussies in the longest format as a goal.

Bartlett was speaking to ANI amid PBKS' unbeaten run in the Indian Premier League (IPL), having won five and one match ending in a no result, giving them 11 points and leaving them just a few more away from the playoffs. The 27-year-old has featured in all games so far, having taken four wickets at an average of 57.00 and an economy rate of 10.52, with best figures of 2/9.

The Queensland pacer has been impressive for Australia in his brief international career so far, taking 24 scalps in 21 T20Is at an average of 22.04 and an economy rate of 7.95, with best figures of 3/13. In five ODIs, he has taken 15 wickets at an average of 11.13, with two four-wicket hauls and best figures of 4/17.

In his short international career so far, he has taken wickets of some of the world's current best and legends alike, including Virat Kohli, Babar Azam, Tim Seifert, Shai Hope, Suryakumar Yadav, Aiden Markram and Shubman Gill across limited-overs cricket.

After these fine performances in the limited-overs cricket, Bartlett has his eyes set on wearing the baggy green and has enjoyed learning from the 'Big Three' pace trio of Pat Cummins (32), Josh Hazlewood (35), Mitchell Starc (36), who are heading into the final stage of their careers and could pave way for a new generation of pacers near the end of this decade.

In a bid to make himself a regular in the line-up across formats and earn the Test cap, Bartlett has been working on his skills as a defensive bowler and trying to bat as well as he can. With an average of 16.11 and a strike rate of over 125, including a fifty in 59 T20 innings, Bartlett, who has 548 runs in the format, can clearly tonk a long ball, having played a vital 11* run cameo against Gujarat Titans (GT), holding one end steady with his "good mate" Cooper Connolly during a chase of 163, which got chaotic courtesy a spicy Prasidh Krishna spell which collapsed GT from 110/2 to 118/6.

"Having those three boys (Cummins, Hazlewood, Starc) in particular, it has been amazing for my career. They are three of the best we have had, and they are getting younger with the performances they have been putting out, it is amazing to watch. For me, it is about adding more attributes to my game, developing my defensive skills, as I have been doing for the last 12 to 18 months and trying to take that next step. Learning from these three boys (the Big Three pace trio) and knowing them has been amazing. I am still trying to work on my game, trying to add whenever I can with the bat. Hopefully, I continue to grow and get better each passing day and every competition," he said.

Xavier has represented Queensland in 32 first-class matches, having taken 111 wickets at an average of 25.77, with seven four-fers and three five-wicket hauls, is no different from many other cricketers from the country, aspiring to wear the prestigious Baggy Green Test cap.

"You grow up wanting to play Test cricket for Australia and get that Baggy Green. But we have so many great bowlers in Australian cricket. So it is about trying to buy me some time, make sure I am number one, stay fit and on the park and finally, putting in good performances. The rest will take care of itself," he signed off.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya M
Bartlett's 11* cameo against GT was really crucial! It's rare to see pacers contribute with the bat like that. Aussie cricket always produces these all-round fast bowlers. But I hope he doesn't get too distracted by IPL money and keeps his focus on the Baggy Green dream. 🙏
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Arvind K
His first-class record of 111 wickets at 25.77 is solid but not extraordinary. The real test will come when he faces our Indian batting line-up on turning tracks. Still, it's refreshing to see a bowler who values Test cricket over T20 leagues. Respect for that mindset.
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Neha T
Interesting how he mentioned learning from Starc, Hazlewood, and Cummins. Those three have been nightmares for Indian batsmen in Tests! 😅 If Bartlett can even be half as good as them, Australia's bowling future is secure. But first, he needs to improve his T20 economy rate of 10.52 in IPL - bit expensive for modern standards.
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Vikram R
The way he dismissed Virat Kohli and Suryakumar Yadav shows he has skills. But Test cricket in Australia is a different beast - Kookaburra ball, bouncy pitches, and longer spells. Let's see if he can maintain his pace and accuracy over five days. The Baggy Green dream is noble but the journey is long.
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Sneha G
I love that he mentioned working on his defensive bowling skills. In T20s everyone wants wickets but Test cricket tests your patience and discipline. Reminds me of how Bumrah evolved. Also

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