Seems a bit overboard tbh. Mediocre yes, terrible no. Though being an NZer certainly keeps your standards low.I'm setting myself up for this post being dug in a couple of months time but Australia's batting is ****ing terrible.
Nah, their batting has been rotten and prone to enormous collapses for at least 4 years. The only saving grace has been when Michael Clarke's gone into God Mode and made the batting look semi-respectable.Tbf, this is a side that scored massive runs against South Africa, who have a better attack than England, in Brisbane and Adelaide. Sure, Ponting and Hussey aren't around anymore, but Ponting wasn't doing much in his last few years anyway. Cowan and Warner both managed to score tons against the Saffa's. Hughes, who had a good home season and went OK against Sri Lanka, and Rogers will definitely be doing better against England than Quiney and Ponting did against South Africa, and while whoever bats at 6 probably won't do as well as Hussey did, they'll probably go OK.
It's like everyone has forgotten this side nearly got to number one in the world not that long ago, and did a whole lot better against South Africa than we did I might add, just because they had a terrible tour of India.
Great post.Hence why in my opinion Rogers has to open.He is an opener a better one at that than Cowan.Warner has played some great knocks opening.Warner will obviously remain at the top.Rogers and Warner opening combination is the way to go.If Cowan is going to play the first test selectors neeD to ask themselves - Can he bat at 3,4?Is he a bétter fit thAn Hughes,Khawaja and WAtson?And what do you do when you discover you only have one Test quality batsman?
Australia's batting is ****.
****. Absolutely ****.
People need to face up to this fact. It means the selectors can't just pick the batsmen in any order they feel like and declare players proven failures willy nilly when they don't perform immediately. Clarke aside, these blokes aren't true Test quality batsmen so the management needs to find them niche roles and hope it all gels together as a unit. The batting order becomes important in this situation.
Johnson has never really been a swing bowler though. Very occasionally when all the moons align he does swing it - and even so I think people have sometimes misinterpreted seam movement for swing in his case (lots of deliveries in South Africa being a prime example) - but he's never been a consistent swinger of the ball. Starc on the other hand has always been a swing bowler; it's not something he's had to alter his game to try and add.Wasn't Johnson ment to relish the swing in 2009, after using it so effectively against South Africa a few months before?
Yeah, that comment was probably unnecessary, don't really know why I posted it. There were definitely people who thought Johnson would be more effective with a Duke though, and I do have my doubts about Starc suddenly gunning it with a dark red in his hand. I guess that was the comparison I was trying to make.Johnson has never really been a swing bowler though. Very occasionally when all the moons align he does swing it - and even so I think people have sometimes misinterpreted seam movement for swing in his case (lots of deliveries in South Africa being a prime example) - but he's never been a consistent swinger of the ball. Starc on the other hand has always been a swing bowler; it's not something he's had to alter his game to try and add.
I'm not saying Starc should definitely play, but the constant comparisons with Mitchell ****ing Johnson are really beginning to grind my gears.
I really don't think Starc is one of Australia best three seamers for a test match at the moment. He has loads of potential, but he just isn't there yet IMO. He's a tad wayward and has never really swung it consistently from the stuff I've seen of him. He's also far too likely to have a meltdown where he delivers nothing but garbage for a long period, such as at the WACA against South Africa.