Rod Marsh quits as Australia's chairman of selectors over Test crisis

Australia's chairman of selectors Rod Marsh quit on Wednesday with immediate effect after the team suffered an extended run of five heavy Test defeats.

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Rod Marsh quits as Australia's chairman of selectors over Test crisis

Rod Marsh - File Photo

Australia's chairman of selectors Rod Marsh quit on Wednesday with immediatede effect after the team suffered an extended run of five heavy Test defeats, leaving them in a crisis.

Rod Marsh said that it was time for "some fresh thinking". The former wicketkeeping great, 69, stepped down amid recriminations about the poorly performing team which crashed to a first-ever home series defeat to South Africa on Tuesday.

"This is my own decision and no one within Cricket Australia has pressured me or even suggested that I should dothis," Marsh said in a statement.

Cricket Australia said it would hold an extraordinary meeting later Wednesday to decide on an interim replacement, with an announcement "in due course".

Marsh, one of several leading cricket officials under intense pressure, had previously insisted he would see out his contract which runs to the middle of next year.

But on Wednesday he said it was time for a new perspective after a run of defeats which has prompted severe criticism in Australian media.
"Clearly, it is time for some fresh thinking, just as it is for our Test team to welcome some new faces as we build forthe future," Marsh said.

"I have always had the best interests of Australian cricket foremost in my heart, and that's why I have made this decision."
Australia's four-man selection panel now consists of Mark Waugh, Trevor Hohns and coach Darren Lehmann.

The panel has been under heavy scrutiny over the shocking results of Steve Smith's national team, culminating in their latest batting collapse of eight for 32 in their innings and80 runs defeat to the Proteast in Hobart this week.

Only hours before Marsh's announcement, Cricket Australia chief James Sutherland voiced support for him to see out his contract.   

 "He said he will finish up June and we will make decisions about where and how we transition to that in thefuture," Sutherland told reporters in Hobart.

Former Test fast bowler Jason Gillespie and Test captain Ricky Ponting have been touted as possible successors. Australia's team announcement for next week's third and final day-night Test in Adelaide has been delayed until Sunday so selectors can assess players' form in domestic Sheffield Shield matches. 

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