Five thoughts on the Ashes after England won 3-0
1. This series was about Australia more than
England
But the overriding themes of this series were all
Australian. The sacking/resignation of Micky Arthur before the series, the
Warner punch, Agar’s debut, Ryan Harris’ comeback, leg before Watson, batting
order shuffles and dodgy radio interviews, Australia dominated the headlines,
if not the cricket. Having seen four previous home Ashes series, never before
have Australia quite so much been the story, and provided so many moments for
the cricket media, whether these being the brilliance of a swashbuckling
teenager or the idiocy of a drunken moron, wasted reviews or the best bowler of
the series.
2. England need to up the ante
England deserve great credit for what they do, because for a
side with very few great players, they win a lot of games. Their top order
batsmen wear down the pace bowlers (although not in this series) and then their
middle order milk the spinners. The pace bowlers work the new ball, and then
bowl tightly with the old ball, whilst Swann spins his web. It’s not
particularly entertaining, its real grinding cricket, but it gets the results,
and it was too good for Australia.
The problem is Australia are no longer the standard bearers
for Test cricket. Grinding teams down works very well when your opposition are
worse than you, but as perfectly demonstrated by South Africa last summer, it
doesn’t work when the opposition are better. South Africa’s batsmen simply
played out the new ball, knocked the seamer around in the middle order, and blunted
Swann. Their bowlers were simply too explosive for England, with the four
seamers finding wickets on a regular basis.
For England to beat South Africa, they cannot try to grind
them down. The only times South Africa have looked under pressure whilst
winning away in both England and Australia have been when first Kevin Pietersen
and Michael Clarke took the attack to their bowling, whilst their batting was
hustled by the sheer guts and energy of Peter Siddle. To beat the South
Africans, England must be able to take the attack to their bowlers, and the
batsmen in particular must be prepared to risk dismissal to get the rewards for
scoring quickly.
3. Australia are slowly healing
Australia have now lost seven or their last nine Tests,
several of them by large margins, despite only ten months ago being one victory
against South Africa away from being the Test number one team in the world. Yet
they may be in a better position than they were on that day.
Even if the Aussies had won that Test, their ranking was
heavily based on performances in 2010, and based around pillars that were bound
to disappear. Ricky Ponting and Mike Hussey could not go on forever, Michael
Clarke could not keen pounding double hundreds forever, and the decline was
inevitable. Now that it has happened, and happened in such jarring fashion, it
dampens the expectations on a team that is good but lacks both knowhow and the
confidence to win Tests such as the one at Durham.
Towards the end of the series in England, Australia were
beginning to bring things together. Hopefully, both for Australia and the
cricket public, Ryan Harris will finally have an injury free run and show the
world how good he is. Shane Watson may finally have found a home at three,
Chris Rogers was an inspired, if short term, pick, Steve Smith has shown he now
has the ability to match his Test ready temperament, and the young trio of
Starc, Pattinson and Faulkner have shown they can get Test batsmen out. Free
from the pressure of being in the race for being the best side in the world,
the Aussies will have room to grow in time for the 2015 series.
Before this series, Ian Bell was one of England’s more
divisive players. To his fans, he was a player of rarely seen beauty who had made
runs in some of England’s biggest wins, and to his critics, his technique hid a
player incapable of making runs under pressure. It’s a failing Bell has
admitted to in the past, and for him, this series buried that hatchet.
He made significantly more runs than anyone else at a
significantly better average, made more hundreds than his teammates put
together, and only one less than the Australians. It is arguable that of his
twenty Test centuries, the three he scored this series are his best three. All
were under pressure, all three came in low totals, and England won all three
Tests.
In truth, three innings made Bell, all in 2009. One was his
torturous 28 in the first innings of the first Test against West Indies, made
batting at three, which saw him dropped from the Test side. Bell that he was
forced to evaluate his career at that point, and realised that if he wanted to
be remembered as a significant Test player, he needed to make pressure runs.
The second innings was Jonathan Trott’s debut hundred, removing the need for
Bell to bat three. The third was a gritty 76 to save the 3rd Test in
South Africa, against Steyn in full flow.
Since then, Bell has looked a different player. At home in
the middle order (he averages 51 at 5 and 60 at 6), he’s scored runs more
consistently and more heavily, and ultimately this summer, he can say without
doubt that he won England the series.
The decision to sack Micky Arthur before the Ashes was a
brutal but necessary move for Australia. If, as reported in Australia, that the
confusion over Arthur’s role was the main factor in the poor relationship
between Michael Clarke and Shane Watson, and that he had neither the skill to
manufacture peace between the two or the mental toughness to drop one, then he
had to go. Darren Lehmann was essentially given a free series to assess his
players, and has been praised for bringing the fun back to the Australian
setup. But in terms of the cricket, Lehmann has been found well short.
Firstly, Lehmann has been incorrectly praised for the
selections of both Chris Rogers and Brad Haddin. They were Arthur’s picks,
which Lehmann benefitted from. He does deserve credit for keeping Steve Smith
on tour and then playing him, but this should be negated by the horrible
decision that was the selection of Ashton Agar. Agar may well one day be a Test
bowler, and his 98 was glorious to watch, but it shouldn’t hide the fact this
was a selection error of Darren Pattinson proportions. Agar was patently not
ready to bowl tightly at Test level, and the strong performances of Nathan
Lyon, a man treated poorly by Australia for the crime of not being as good as
Shane Warne, highlighted this glaring error.
Lehmann seems to be trying to bring a blokey element back to
the Aussie side. But this isn’t a good club side; it’s an international side up
against the very best in the world. Keeping Shane Watson happy may be an
achievement but it’s no good to be his mate when he needs an answer to why he
keeps getting pinned lbw. Making Peter Siddle laugh is no help when trying to
find a plan to get Ian Bell out. Bringing drinks on dressed in your whites
doesn’t help your left handers play Graeme Swann. Giving a matey interview to
an Aussie radio station mid series doesn’t correct Mitchell Starc’s action.
When England arrive in Australia they will know everything about every single
possible player the Aussies will pick. Does Lehmann have it within himself to
prepare the Australians well enough in return?
And three thoughts on the women’s Ashes, which England won
12-4
The women’s series, for the first time, was decided across
all three formats instead of just a one off Test. The idea was two-fold,
firstly hoping to encourage positive cricket in the Test match, and secondly to
create a greater buzz around the series as it would now last for three weeks as
opposed to one. Whilst the Test match remained dull due to the points gained
for a win (6) being too high, it did allow greater media attention for the
women’s Ashes, as people were interested in the new format, and a longer series
gave greater scope for televised matches with something really riding on them.
However, the previous established orthodoxy of playing the
women’s t20’s before the men’s games needs looking at. The success of t20
cricket is built on the very sound principle that the entire game should take
less than three hours, meaning people don’t lose an entire day watching.
Playing two t20’s back to back defeats this purpose. Whilst in the past it’s
been used to raise the profile of the women’s game, England and Australia both
can feel as if they are beyond that, and can attract significant crowds on
their own merits, as proved by the first t20 at Chelmsford last Tuesday, which
saw virtually full capacity for a standalone game.
Whilst 12-4 looks a very comfortable winning margin, England
were in all sorts of trouble during the Test match, 113-6 replying to
Australia’s 331-6 declared, still needing 68 to avoid the follow on halfway
through the second day. They were dug out of this hole by 22 year-old Heather
Knight (helped by the stunningly obdurate Laura Marsh), who scored a virtually
chanceless 157 to avoid the follow on and the get England nearly level, and
thus ensure the draw. She backed this up during the 2nd and 3rd
ODI’s, making a punchy 31 followed by 69 in a match winning partnership with
Sarah Taylor, and despite a poor t20 series which ended with a badly torn
hamstring, she was rightly named player of the series.
The short term benefit for England is that after a disappointing
World Cup where they desperately lacked a third heavy run scorer after
Charlotte Edwards and Taylor, they seem to have filled both this role and that
of Edwards’ opening partner, a long term weakness. But the long term benefits
for Knight may well be far greater. The big question for the women’s side is
who will replace Charlotte Edwards as captain when she retires, and unlike when
Edwards herself became captain, there is no obvious successor. If Edwards
retires as expected in 2017, Vice-captain Jenny Gunn will be 31, and the other
two obvious candidates both have considerable drawbacks: Holly Colvin is in and
out of the side, and Sarah Taylor’s workload is already significant due to both
her dual role and the extra attention her talent brings. Already considered to
be a player who does and says the right things, Knight may well have jumped the
queue to be Edwards’ successor.
3. Average is not good enough for Australia
Although Australia entered the series as both t20 and ODI World Champions, this gave the false impression that there was some distance between the two sides. England have now won 10 of their last 12 t20’s against Australia (one of those defeats was the World t20 final by 4 runs), and had England won the group match between the two sides in the ODI World Cup this year instead of falling 2 runs short, it would have been them facing the West Indies in the final. The sides were already close, and the loss of Lisa Sthalekar probably made England favourites.
However, given the Aussies only needed to draw the series,
were the better side in the Test and then won the first ODI, they had plenty
enough talent and all the momentum. A lot will be made in Australia of the
sudden loss of form of golden girl Ellyse Perry, but the reasons for Australia’s
demise are a lot more subtle than that. Instead of a number of players
struggling, Australia’s biggest problem has been the number of average
performances from players on the tour. Only Sarah Coyte and maybe Erin Osborne
can say they have definitely enhanced their reputation on this tour, whilst a
number of players have stood still. Whilst Meg Lanning and Jess Cameron made
five fifties between them, these are players that the Aussies need to score
hundreds. The rest of the batting was characterised by wasted starts and slow
contributions, and the bowling whilst serviceable often lacked a cutting edge. The
Aussies need bigger and better to regain the Ashes down under.
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