The left-handed opener has returned to Australia‘s ODI squad on India tour having recovered from concussion and an elbow harm.
Warner flew again to Australia from India final month after struggling a fractured elbow and a head harm within the second Test of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, which the hosts received 2-1.
Apart from a defiant 200 towards South Africa in December, the 36-year-old has struggled in latest checks and there was hypothesis in Australian media that he may retire after the WTC remaining, which begins on June 7 at The Oval. “I think you work through that conversation, and how each player finishes is always different,” McDonald mentioned of Warner. “Some want to go out in a certain way, and others are OK with potentially being dropped out of sides.
“But in the mean time Dave’s absolutely in our plans for the WTC remaining, he is coming again for the one-day sequence (towards India), he is recovered from his harm, so we’ll see Dave again in Australian colors on March 17 and we’ll go from there.”
McDonald said team management were continually talking to senior players about their plans.
“Juggling the schedule that is in entrance of us, we’re staring down 274 days on the street – 144 for the red-ball workforce, 130 for the white-ball workforce,” McDonald said.
“There’s going to be some give and take inside that. We have nice depth, bought protection in all areas and we’re all the time speaking to our seniors gamers with the place they’re at with regard to their careers.”
On Friday, it was revealed that Steve Smith will continued to lead Australia in the ODIs, afer captaining in the last two matches of the Test series, following Pat Cummins’s departure to be with his ailing mother, who died last week.
(With company inputs)
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com