AFTER an aborted attempt six months ago, Stuart MacGill finally appears set to emerge from the shadow of Shane Warne for one final fling in Test cricket.A seven-wicket match haul in Australia`s opening game of their West Indies tour confirmed the 37-year-old leg spinner was over the wrist and knee injuries that threatened to end his career during the summer, and poised to wreak havoc during an expected one-sided three-match series beginning Thursday at Sabina Park.
"I thought he was great, I thought Stuey just got better and better as the game went on," said coach Tim Nielsen after MacGill added figures of 3-50 to his four-wicket haul from the first innings of Australia`s rain-shortened three-day match against Jamaica XI.
"It showed with a bit of work in match conditions that he is headed in the right direction, and that is fantastic for us."
MacGill finished with a match haul of 7-129 to be the pick of the Australian bowlers on a slow wicket.
But as good as his figures were at the Trelawny Multi-Purpose Stadium, it was more the manner of his dismissals that most pleased Nielsen, with MacGill clean bowling two left-handed batsmen with vicious turning leg breaks.
With several left-handers in the Windies top order - and the Sabina Park wicket usually conducive to sharp turn - it was a promising sign for 42-Test veteran, who only six months ago had many questioning whether he would ever return to the national team after undergoing wrist surgery to correct carpal tunnel syndrome.
That surgery followed a poor, injury-hampered, performance in Australia`s two-Test series against Sri Lanka in November - Australia`s first series since the retirement of Warne.
But with the retirement of chinaman bowler Brad Hogg in March, MacGill is again the clear spin candidate for the Australian team, and appears set to make the most of finally being rated No.1 after more than a decade playing second fiddle to Warne.
Every match of Australia`s tour of the Caribbean will be screened LIVE and EXCLUSIVE on Fox Sports.
AAP