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 X marks Watson's Gabba spot 

X marks Watson's Gabba spot

20 Nov, 2008 01:00 AM
Shane Watson faces one of the unluckiest chops of the modern era with Andrew Symonds's X-factor winning the wayward all-rounder an immediate recall to Test cricket.

Australia's selectors swept Symonds straight back into the XI for the first Test against New Zealand on a Gabba greentop, 11 weeks after he was dumped for going fishing when he was supposed to be of attending a team meeting.

A call will be made between Watson and similarly-deserving rookie off-spinner Jason Krejza for 12th man duties before the toss Thursday morning, with the weather set to decide who plays.

The sun shone for the first time in Brisbane for three days on Wednesday, giving an underprepared pitch some invaluable drying time, and lifting Krejza's hopes of playing his first Test on home soil.

More rain was forecast for last night and this morning and skipper Ricky Ponting said he would want to inspect the state of the wicket and overhead conditions before finalising his team.

''They'll be desperately unlucky, whoever misses out there,'' Ponting said. ''Krejza took 12 wickets in the last game he played, and at different times through the Indian series Shane Watson was probably our best bowler.''

As the weather continued to clear, the festering over rates issue also tipped the scales in Krejza's favour as Ponting pointed out the spinner would better help get through the 90 overs required in the day's play.

After finally overcoming his prolonged injury woes, Watson was among Australia's most impressive performers in the 2-0 series loss on the sub-continent, performing with both bat and ball at crucial times.

But Symonds's Test batting form over the previous 18 months at No6 and his match-turning talents were viewed as priceless commodities, even though he's struggled to find form for Queensland this season.

Symonds has just 80 runs at 13 in three Shield games, and his average is single figures at the Gabba, but a defensive Ponting insisted he looked good enough in the nets this week.

He also said it was important to the team the dreadlocked swashbuckler be returned immediately and viewed his return like an ''injury-type replacement''.

''He's a big-game player and his record for Australia leading up to him being left out of the side was very good, so I'm excited about having him back in and I'm sure he'll do a very good job for us,'' Ponting said. ''He has got that ability as we know to turn a game pretty quickly as someone like [Adam Gilchrist] did, but he was a very consistent performer for us in that No6 role, whether it be last summer, the England series or even in the West Indies.

''He does add a lot to your team he adds that X-factor, he adds that great presence in the field.''

Ponting has told Symonds, who completed a Cricket Australia rehabilitation program last week, to continue to be his normal self and play his natural game.

''I don't expect him to be the model citizen,'' he said.

Curator Kev Mitchell Jr predicted a fast bowler's haven but didn't believe the toss would be crucial with the wicket to be lively through the first three days or more. AAP

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