Ashes 2010

The #1 Reason Australia Lost The Ashes

1 Comment 17 January 2011

Only a couple of days ago Derranilphil told us why Damien Wright lost Australia the Ashes. Now Ben Roberts (of Balanced Sports and World Cricket Watch) takes up the debate from a completely different – and more micro – viewpoint.

The poor performance of the Australian batsmen during the Ashes series hopefully will be discussed and debated at length by coaches and players. Let me take an opportunity to put forward an opinion on where I believe the primary issue lies,

Continue Reading

Ashes 2010

Damien Wright Is the reason we Lost the Ashes

5 Comments 16 January 2011

Derranilphil of cricketpodcast.com explains why someone you might never have heard of is the reason Australia lost The Ashes.

Many people, many experts and even the most excellent one Hand One Bounce Podcast have been busy pontificating (note the pun) on the recent Ashes series and the state of elite Australian cricket generally. There’s been absolutely no mention of the grassroots of Australian cricket: i.e. park cricket. We, park cricketers, are going along perfectly happily despite Mitchell Johnson’s inability to bowl two balls in a row on the wicket.

Continue Reading

Ashes 2010

A Whimsicalish Piece on my Reaction to the Glorious Ashes Campaign

No Comments 12 January 2011

Darren Corr reflects on the Ashes…

“Bring me men to match my mountains: Bring me men to match my plains: Men with empires in their purpose and new eras in their brains.”

Sam Walter Foss

Continue Reading

Ashes 2010

Where to now for Australian Cricket?

No Comments 09 January 2011

Matthew Wood of Balanced Sports provides a post Ashes post-mortem for Australia and urges them to focus on 2014.

Whether Australia’s 3-1 defeat at the hands of the Old Enemy doesn’t really matter even though the gut feeling is that Australia’s best side hasn’t ever been as outplayed as convincingly as they were during this series.  The Australia defeated yesterday was comprehensively outgunned and more disturbingly, out-thought.

According to Greg Baum of The Age, this was Australian cricket at it’s deepest depths, it’s perihelion, so heads must roll.  Fair enough – but which ones?  When examining the players who didn’t perform – Hilfenhaus, Johnson, Hughes and Ponting chief among them -  there aren’t adequate candidates awaiting in first class cricket to replace them.  There’s undoubtedly the talent but it’s either too young or too old to be considered ripe for representing their country.

The objective now must be to qualify for the inaugural Test World Championship in 2014.  It’s only three years away and therefore it must be at the forefront of Cricket Australia’s planning – to fail to qualify would be an embarrassment on a par with Canada failing to qualify for an Ice-Hockey tournament or New Zealand being eliminated in the first round of the Rugby World Cup.  Only the four best Test-playing nations will be entered into that competition and it’s now nearly impossible to argue that Australia form part of that quartet.

But all is not lost.  To think back, four years ago England were humiliated to a similar extent by an Australian team no longer great but simply very good.  Of the current Ashes tourists, seven played in the 2007 debacle.  Once the correct path for regrowth is established for a nation, the regreening of their playing stocks can occur relatively quickly, especially with the amount of cricket currently played.  In the next two years there are nineteen Tests against everyone from Bangladesh to South Africa and the “New Enemy” India, enough for youngsters to establish themselves and develop their own techniques coping mechanisms.

Of the seven Englishmen who returned to the antipodes this year, the only trundlers were James Anderson and Monty Panesar and Monty didn’t play a match.  It’s the bowling stocks which needed refreshment and that’s a situation with which Australia can readily identify.  Ben Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson must have exhausted the selectors patience by now and with Ryan Harris willing, though physically unable to be relied upon, the search for new-ball bowlers must begin in earnest, bowlers who can put the ball in threatening areas time and again.  All of Peter George, Josh Hazelwood and James Pattinson have the talent and both Clarke and Ponting have shown they are serviceable leaders of fast men.  There is hope for Michael Beer as the spinner designate and the sooner he is flown to India to learn from the great Indian spinners, the healthier Australian cricket will be.

More troubling is the lack of application displayed by the Australian batsman this series.  Every single player got out with ill-advised shots and to a lack of patience.  With questions still remaining over Shane Watson’s position at opener and the longevity of Ponting and Hussey, their replacements must be young and given time to grow into their roles rather than shoehorned into position and told to perform.  The focus isn’t now crushing Bangladesh or beating Sri Lanka in 2011, it is ensuring that each player elevated to national player experiences  the game in all conditions against the very best players the world has to offer.  If a player – especially a batsman – has a future as a Test cricketer there is a good argument that they shouldn’t be bothering with Twenty20.  If T20s aren’t played then enough space can be created in a player’s schedule which could be used to hone their Test game further.

If Australia misses the Test World Championship in three years’ time, the sport risks irrelevancy in the entire Pacific region.  New Zealand hasn’t been anywhere near on the right path since several of their stars defected to the rebel ICL and Australia’s slide into sub-mediocrity has been slow and painful.  Change is needed, though not necessarily in personnel but in approach.

Latest World Cricket Stories


Podcast

Audio: 33 mins

OHOB Cricket Podcast Episode 73

The OHOB team preview England vs West Indies.

Newsletter

Feast on 5 Juicy Cricket Stories Each Week

Commentary

Follow Live Audio Commentary of all games involving England courtesy of Test Match Sofa (Plays in pop-out window)

Partners

1. World Cricket Bet is the home of online cricket betting tips. Before you place your latest cricket bet, you might want to see what our betting experts think.

2. Live Cricket Central offers Live Cricket Scores, Online Streaming and TV Schedules, Fixtures, Results, News, Videos and more

3.Rugby Betting made easy. Check out the Betting on Rugby guide and compare Rugby World Cup Odds

© 2012 World Cricket Watch. Powered by .

by