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WTC Final: Marnus Labuschagne to open for AUS; Lungi Ngidi picked over Dane Paterson

Updated on: 11 June,2025 08:56 AM IST  |  London
AP , PTI |

Australia are desperate to retain their title, but new opening pair of Marnus Labuschagne and Usman Khawaja face a huge challenge against spirited Proteas in the World Test Championship final at Lord’s today; South Africans pick Ngidi over Paterson for third seamer spot

WTC Final: Marnus Labuschagne to open for AUS; Lungi Ngidi picked over Dane Paterson

Usman Khawaja (left) and Marnus Labuschagne during Australia’s practice session at Lord’s, London, on Monday. Pics/Getty Images

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WTC Final: Marnus Labuschagne to open for AUS; Lungi Ngidi picked over Dane Paterson
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Marnus Labuschagne has been pushed up the batting order to open with Usman Khawaja for Australia in the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord’s from Wednesday.

Labuschagne’s place in the team was in doubt after a lean 2023-25 WTC cycle — average 28.33 runs — but he was given another shot on Tuesday by Australia’s failure to find a permanent replacement at opener for David Warner, who retired from Tests in January 2024.


Teenage specialist opener Sam Konstas was left out and Travis Head, preferred in Sri Lanka in February, will drop back to No. 5 in the order.


Fit-again Josh Hazlewood was also picked ahead of the unlucky Scott Boland in the pace attack. Boland replaced an injured Hazlewood for the 2023 final and starred as Australia beat India by 209 runs at the Oval.

Nine of that 11 will play consecutive WTC finals.

Cameron Green will bat at No. 3 in his first Test since lower spine surgery sidelined him for six months, and at No. 6 the two-meter-tall all-rounder Beau Webster, who debuted in January against India.

SA pacer Lungi Ngidi at Lord’s  on MondaySA pacer Lungi Ngidi at Lord’s on Monday

South Africa gave Lungi Ngidi’s experience the edge over Dane Paterson as the third seamer.

Ngidi hasn’t played a Test since August, but 19 Tests and 55 wickets, including Joe Root’s at Lord’s in 2022, put him in the pace attack with Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen.

A difficult call

Paterson, more deceptive than fast, earned fifers in his last two Tests against Sri Lanka and Pakistan in December and played at Lord’s three times in the last two months for Middlesex in the English County Championship second division but that wasn’t enough. “Probably one of the tougher decisions that has been made. We see what Dane Paterson did for us to the end of last season,” captain Temba Bavuma said.

“But it was more from a tactical point of view. Probably a little bit more pace from Lungi, guess he’s a bit taller as well (1.93 meters to 1.75). Lungi also has a better record, not taking away anything from Patto. But I think he [Ngidi] will complement that bowling attack a little more. We have a guy like [Wiaan] Mulder, who can give us something similar like Patto.”

Mulder to bat at No. 3

Mulder was chosen to bat at No. 3 ahead of Tony de Zorzi, who has more runs but hasn’t bowled in a test. Mulder’s medium pace has taken 30 wickets in 18 matches.

“It’s about giving him a lot more confidence, keep backing him and just allowing him to do what he does best,” Bavuma said of Mulder. “He has an opportunity in a pressure situation, but I think he can take comfort from the fact that the guys are backing him. We just want him to play his game,” he added.

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