Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
I don't think so somehow. He played very well against some generally outstanding bowling - something he did do at other points in his career but not really extraordinarily often (due in no small part of course to the fact that more of the attacks than not that he faced were piss weak). For me Langer can be very proud of his 2005 Ashes, unlike pretty much anyone other than Warne.Langer underperformed by his standards.
I don't think he was in bad form for those 12 months either - I think he'd simply been, yes, worked-out. Kyle Mills always had his number, and Shoaib Akhtar did in that series against Pakistan as well. Hoggard merely carried this on (and he did it in 2006/07 as well - only Rudi Koertzen's refusal to give two plumb lbws stopped this from being in full view), he was certainly not the first orchestrator.Interesting you say that Hayden was worked out. He was coming off a good twelve months of bad form in test matches at the time, which would have been career ending if it was not for the hundred in the final test.
I know. Nonetheless, he was a batsman in supreme nick reduced by both the bowling and the Umpiring to a complete waste of space in the last four Tests.Martyn was the unlucky player of the series. He'd just had a huge year in international cricket and was dropped on the back of the Ashes alone, even though he'd been sawn off on no less than two occasions (really bad decisions too).
He was dropped just 2 (proper) Tests later - he played the opening two games against West Indies then was out because Hussey had to stay when Langer returned. Clarke was not really very good until he went and scored 309 for once out in the 2005/06 domestic season. That was the first time he truly hinted at being a Test-class batsman, and he has demonstrated this since coming back in in 2006/07.Clarke was a relatively new player at that stage, and had some technical weaknesses in his game which were exploited by more than England - remember he was dropped a series or two later.
Not to mention dropped catches - although England put down quite a few more than Australia, their bowling was so superior to the Australians' that the chances just kept coming. And the no-balls weren't just significant for wickets with them (again, though England bowled more no-balls they were lucky that no wickets fell to them whereas the Aussies weren't) - some of the matches were of such fine margins that the gifted runs might easily have been significant.It was a series in which so many factors combined to give such a memorable and enjoyable series of cricket - underperforming Australian stars, a huge sense of belief among the English team, career best performances from Flintoff, Simon Jones and Hoggard, some really horrible umpiring, wickets from no balls, sugary mints and misplaced cricket balls.
As for the Umpiring, to describe it as "really horrible" is a vast exaggeration. There were a couple of utter shockers (Katich's lbw that pitched about half a foot outside leg being the most extreme example) but mostly it was about as you'd expect in a five-match Test series. It favoured the stronger team (England on that occasion) as it always will, but it was not of a deplorably low standard.