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Australia in South Africa 2011-12 newz
 "Australia" is not gambling with the future of the young New South Wales fast bowler Pat Cummins  by rushing him into the Australia Test squad for the tour of South  Africa, the outgoing chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch has said. 
 Still only 18, Cummins has enjoyed a meteoric rise, and will now stay on  in South Africa for the whole tour after impressing all who have viewed  him in the two Twenty20 matches between the visitors and South Africa.  He has played only three first-class matches, the last of which was the  Sheffield Shield final between NSW and Tasmania. 
 Cummins' 48 overs to return 3 for 118 in the first innings of the final  was the probable source of a back  complaint that kept him out of two  winter tours - Hilditch revealed Cummins would have been a likely  visitor to Sri Lanka if he had been fit. But it also demonstrated his  ability to sustain his pace and discipline over long periods. 
 There has been something of a debate between NSW Cricket and Cricket  Australia over the best way to handle Cummins' development, but Hilditch  said there was not a trace of doubt among the selectors about his  readiness for Test match duty. 
hink he is going to be real good and  it's definitely in our view the right time to bring him into the squad,"  Hilditch said in Adelaide. "We have got to be careful, we are building  it up in the sense that he's 18 and he's in the Test squad for Australia  so it's a massive thing, but we don't want to put too high expectations  on him. 
 "He's certainly in our view one of the most exciting prospects that have  come along for some time, certainly if we're going to get back to the  top of Test cricket I would imagine he's going to play a big role." 
 The two T20 matches in South Africa provided confirmation of what the  selectors had felt when they made Cummins the youngest-ever holder of a  Cricket Australia contract. In those games, Cummins returned figures of 3  for 25 and 2 for 26, encouraging the call to keep him on tour and put  him in line to be Australia's youngest Test debutant since Ian Craig was  chosen as a 17-year-old in 1953. 
 "We thought in the Shield final he showed that he can produce in the  longer form of the game, so it's a combination of things," Hilditch  said. "He has obviously got explosive speed for a young man, I would  expect he'd get bigger, stronger and quicker, but also execution under  pressure has been exceptional in Twenty20 cricket and hopefully that is  going to convert to Test cricket." 
 In South Africa, Cummins has made quite an impression on the
 Australian  squad, earning high praise from Cameron White and Shane Watson after his  T20 debut. Watson said Cummins' level head had been noticeable. 
 "There's no way he will let it get to his head," Watson said. "Deep down  he knows that it's a really special gift that he's got, to bowl that  fast at such a young age." 
 White said Cummins had bowled "like a seasoned pro" and was the  difference between victory and defeat in Australia's first match of the  tour. 
 There was a strong possibility that Cummins and Pattinson would be  considered for the first home Tests of the summer against New Zealand,  but Cummins' rapid progress has outstripped that scenario. 
 Cummins' selection in place of the young Victorian quick James Pattinson  is the only change to the squad that enjoyed a 1-0 series success in  Sri Lanka. 
 "James is very unlucky to miss selection," Hilditch said. "He is a very  good young fast bowler who has done well in his limited opportunities at  international level to date. 
 "We're sure he'll return to the Sheffield Shield and place plenty of  pressure on those in the Test squad ahead of what is a very demanding  domestic summer of Test cricket." 
22:55
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