A change of role in the middle of last year's unsuccessful Ashes campaign transformed his career.
Until then Watson, who turned 29 this month, had been used as a bowling all-rounder who batted at seven or eight in the order in Test and one-day cricket.
Although he was a fine athlete and routinely brilliant in the field, Watson's medium-fast deliveries have always seemed laboured and his action somewhat manufactured. By contrast, he is a naturally clean, exciting striker of the ball but one with apparently little chance of winning promotion in a strong Australian middle order.
After Phillip Hughes's technical deficiencies had been exposed by the England pace bowlers in the first two Ashes Tests last year, the Australian selectors cast around for a replacement opener. Watson, they decided, despite an average of 4.7 when opening for his state, was their man.
The move was an instant success with Watson's essentially sound technique proving equal to the challenges posed by the new ball. He scored 62 and 53 at Edgbaston, 51 at Old Trafford followed by 34 and 40 when Australia surrendered the Ashes at the Oval. In his first eight Tests at the top of the order he tallied seven 50s and a century.
"I got the opportunity in the Ashes last year to see how good I could become as a top-order batsman and things have been going really well," said Watson. "So it's taken a bit of pressure off my bowling and also my body as well. I don't have to push my body as hard as when I was trying to make it primarily as a bowler.
"It has probably reverted to how I have always sort of seen myself to be, as being a batsman who does bowl to give the side balance more than anything. But you do have to take your opportunities and my opportunities as a younger guy were primarily my bowling."
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