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Can Cooper barrel into contention?

Tom Cooper has played 38 internationals for the Netherlands, but is still aiming for an Australia call-up

Brydon Coverdale
Brydon Coverdale
02-Oct-2014
Tom Cooper: "I've been fortunate that I've been able to have so many experiences with the Dutch and get a taste of it. But as a kid, playing for Australia was that No.1 goal"  •  ICC

Tom Cooper: "I've been fortunate that I've been able to have so many experiences with the Dutch and get a taste of it. But as a kid, playing for Australia was that No.1 goal"  •  ICC

Tom Cooper is in elite company. His one-day international average of 48.80 is higher than that of Michael Hussey, Michael Clarke and Dean Jones. It's not quite up to Michael Bevan levels, and of current Australians George Bailey is also ahead of him, but there is no doubt that Cooper's figures are impressive.
The only thing is, all his runs have been scored for the Netherlands. That in turn means the majority have come against other associate nations - his top five scores all been at the expense of either Afghanistan or Scotland. There was an unbeaten World Cup fifty against West Indies in 2011, and 47 against England in the same tournament, but opportunities against top nations are scarce.
Cooper hopes that will change one day, for as much as he has learnt from going Dutch, he would rather wear the yellow of Australia than the orange of the Netherlands. Or, better still, a baggy green. To that end, he hopes that 2014-15 will be a repeat of his strong 2013-14 season, a summer in which he was second only to Marcus North on the Sheffield Shield run tally with 881 at 51.82.
But first comes the Matador Cup, the one-day tournament that begins on Saturday and runs through most of October. Cooper was among the top 10 run scorers in the competition last year, with 294 at 49.00, and his efforts across both formats earned him an Australia A call-up this winter. Now he has to ensure that last year was not an anomaly.
"It doesn't matter if you do well one year and not the next," Cooper told ESPNcricinfo. "The challenge for me this year is to go out and do it all again. I had some decent form in the Australia A series and now just chomping at the bit to get into the season and hopefully re-enact what happened last year."
Cooper's Australia A selection led to an unbeaten one-day century in Darwin, and a pair of first-class half-centuries against South Africa A in Townsville. But he knows that big hundreds are required to take his game to the next level, the kind of scores his South Australia team-mate Phillip Hughes keeps accumulating match after match, season after season.
"That's where I'd like to take my game," Cooper said. "It's just a matter of consistently scoring those runs and once you get a start, turn them into big scores. There's no better example than what Hughesy has done over the last couple of months and forcing his way back into the side. It's unbelievable what he's done. It makes you want to do it yourself."
But there are some things Cooper has done that Hughes has not: played in a World Cup and a World T20. They were opportunities that arrived through the fact that his mother, Berni, is from the Netherlands. In fact, it was her idea that Cooper apply for an EU passport to make it easier to travel in Europe and perhaps play county cricket, and from there he was rapidly propelled into the Dutch side.
"I had no idea up until six or seven years ago, Mum mentioned the idea more for the travel side of things than cricket," he said. "It's been a great opportunity to play in a couple of World Cups and experience things that not many people get to experience in their life. It doesn't get any bigger on the world stage than that.
"Just to compete against the best teams in the world, if you play against South Africa and see how AB de Villiers goes about his game, and just being there watching them play and prepare, and getting to rate yourself at that level. If you do well it gives you a lot of confidence to know what you're doing and that you're somewhere around the mark."
The tournament nature of the World Cup will be reflected in the Matador Cup again this year; it begins on Saturday, when South Australia take on New South Wales at Allan Border Field in Brisbane, and defending champions Queensland host Victoria at the Gabba. Then for the next three weeks, it's all one-day cricket before the Sheffield Shield begins on October 31.
Given Cooper's success in the Shield last summer, and the fact that new Test batsmen such as George Bailey and Alex Doolan have failed to fully grasp their opportunities, it is not out of the question that he could find himself in contention for a baggy green over the next year. If that were to happen, he would have to forgo the Dutch orange, but it would not be a hard decision to make.
"As a kid it's always been a dream to play for Australia," he said "I've been fortunate that I've been able to have so many experiences with the Dutch and get a taste of it. But as a kid, playing for Australia was that No.1 goal that I wanted to do and still want to do."

Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @brydoncoverdale