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AAP
AAP
Oliver Caffrey

Johnson rips ex-teammate Warner over Test farewell lap

Champion fast bowler Mitchell Johnson has launched an extraordinary attack on David Warner over his former Australian teammate's farewell Test series.

Johnson has torn into the Australian opener's "hero send-off" and opened up old wounds from Sandpapergate in an explosive column as Warner prepares to bow out of Test cricket in January.

But chairman of selectors George Bailey vigorously defended Warner.

"Ultimately we still think he's in our best 11 players to win the first Test," Bailey said.

"We think David is the right person."

Warner has expressed a desire to finish his red-ball career at home when Australia face Pakistan in the third and final Test of the series at the SCG.

He and Johnson played together for Australia for more than five years, including in the 2013-14 Ashes whitewash and the 2015 ODI World Cup victory.

"As we prepare for David Warner's farewell series, can somebody please tell me why?" Johnson wrote in The West Australian.

"Why a struggling Test opener gets to nominate his own retirement date. 

"And why a player at the centre of one of the biggest scandals in Australian cricket history warrants a hero's send-off?"

Johnson went further, shredding 37-year-old Warner over his involvement in the infamous ball-tampering scandal that earned the opener a 12-month ban.

"Although Warner wasn't alone in Sandpapergate, he was at the time a senior member of the team and someone who liked to use his perceived power as a 'leader'," Johnson wrote.

"Now the way he is going out is underpinned by more of the same arrogance and disrespect to our country.

"What will fans bring for Warner? Bunnings would sell out of sandpaper."

Speaking after the squad for the first Test against Pakistan was named on Sunday, Bailey said Warner's ability to put the opposition under pressure with his batting is "pretty special and not to be taken lightly".

Bailey said it would be impossible to replace Warner as an opener, comparing it to when leg-spinner Shane Warne retired.

"I'd put David in that category, the way he's opened the batting for Australia for such a long period," Bailey said.

Johnson also had a shot at Bailey in his column, prompting a cold response.

"I've been sent little snippets of it - I hope he's OK," Bailey said.

Johnson criticised Bailey for being too close to the players as a selector.

"My only question would be ... if someone can show me how being distant and unaware of what players are going through and what the plans are with their team and the coaching staff, how that's more beneficial, I'd be all ears," Bailey said.

Johnson's attack on Warner comes two years after he savaged Pat Cummins in his same newspaper column amid the fallout from Justin Langer's exit as Australian coach.

The 42-year-old's relationship with his fast-bowling brethren Cummins and Mitchell Starc has not been the same since.

Johnson took 313 wickets in 73 Tests for Australia, retiring in November 2015.

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