That was a magnificent innings, one of the finest ever played by an Australian batsman IMO and you'd never catch me saying otherwise. Despite what you may have gleaned from my post, Deano was one of my favourite batsmen growing up and I loved watching him play.
However, it became a fairly common pattern of Jones' career that he tended to save his best for when it mattered least. There are no such thing as "easy" Test runs but Jones cashed in on dead rubber syndrome more than many.
Yeah, that century he made in the 5th test against India after having a bad series springs to mind.
The double century against West Indies in the drawn 5th test in Adelaide was a turning point for Australian batting. Yes, it was a dead rubber. But to dismiss that innings as just another big score at the end of the series is very ignorant.
For years Australian batsmen were dominated and intimidated by the West Indian bowlers. Jones stood up to them and scored a double century at a s/r of 62 which was pretty damn good for tests back then. I remember Jones and Fat Merv smacking the West Indian bowlers around like they were children. And it just wasnt the fact that Jones made a lot of runs, he had the crap pounded out of him by the West Indian bowlers. Ambrose, Marshall, Patterson and Walsh. Do you think they waltzed up and bowled lollipops and rainbows to Jones?
It was the first time I had ever seen an Australian batsman be on the offence against the West Indians. Sure, Border had had success against them and Kepler Wessels in 84/85 but they were batsmen that survived, hung on for runs. They played a battle of attrition rather then go on the attack.
After the win at the SCG in the 4th test, a place were Australia was expected to do well, then following that up with a solid drawn and scoring 500 runs in the 1st innings against the West Indies and then narrowly, and unfairly, losing the tri-angular ODI series in controversial circumstances Australian cricket started to have a better outlook. After the 3rd test against the West Indies everything looked bleak and the Trans-Tasman win and world cup wins looked like flukes. But by the end of the 1988/89 there were signs of promise.
Then the 1989 Ashes happened. Jones' double century in Adelaide contributed to that turn around - all from a dead rubbber.