stephen
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
"Get ready for a broken ****ing arm."
"You just wait until Brisbane."
Superficially these two comments are similar but they reveal the root cause of the issues faced by this Australia team.
In the first instance you have a captain who is present, switched on and focused on the game in front of him. He achieved a lot with a much poorer side than this one.
In the second instance you have a captain who has mentally given up on the current game (Sydney) who is pinning his hopes on the next game. What's worse, the attitude was "we just have to show up in Brisbane and we'll win". It's the same thinking that said "it's ok to lose in 2018 because we don't have our two best batsmen", when in reality the side was consistently batting for less than a day on roads.
The attitude of the Australian leadership is why Australia now failed to dismiss a side on day 5 on a regular basis, despite having arguably the best bowler of Yorkers, three quicks who can bowl 140+, an off spinner who has nearly 400 wickets and a number of decent part time options.
I'm not sure if it's Langer or Paine, but the performance of this Australian side is way below par given the talent available. They continuously let the game slide, showing no urgency on days 1-4 in a must win match. They are satisfied with 370 on a batsman's paradise against a third string attack. The team is acting less than the sum of its parts.
Players like Wade and Head are getting starts but never converting, falling to lazy shots, the likes of which saw Martyn banished for years.
There is a lack of strategic test match thinking. Starc in particular is often mismanaged. He should only bowl around the wicket if he's bumping a batsman to get them out. For long periods in Brisbane he bowled around the wicket, but not bowling bouncers - bowling length. But doing so was pointless because it takes out the possibility for lbw, reduces the chances of bowled and caught behind and is generally unthreatening. In Sydney he tried bowling leg side bouncers for an entire spell and wasted every ball that spell. The problem is not the bowler's talent, it's his management.
The problem with the Australian side is its leadership, which is slow, unresponsive and is content with mediocrity. It must change or we will continue losing.
"You just wait until Brisbane."
Superficially these two comments are similar but they reveal the root cause of the issues faced by this Australia team.
In the first instance you have a captain who is present, switched on and focused on the game in front of him. He achieved a lot with a much poorer side than this one.
In the second instance you have a captain who has mentally given up on the current game (Sydney) who is pinning his hopes on the next game. What's worse, the attitude was "we just have to show up in Brisbane and we'll win". It's the same thinking that said "it's ok to lose in 2018 because we don't have our two best batsmen", when in reality the side was consistently batting for less than a day on roads.
The attitude of the Australian leadership is why Australia now failed to dismiss a side on day 5 on a regular basis, despite having arguably the best bowler of Yorkers, three quicks who can bowl 140+, an off spinner who has nearly 400 wickets and a number of decent part time options.
I'm not sure if it's Langer or Paine, but the performance of this Australian side is way below par given the talent available. They continuously let the game slide, showing no urgency on days 1-4 in a must win match. They are satisfied with 370 on a batsman's paradise against a third string attack. The team is acting less than the sum of its parts.
Players like Wade and Head are getting starts but never converting, falling to lazy shots, the likes of which saw Martyn banished for years.
There is a lack of strategic test match thinking. Starc in particular is often mismanaged. He should only bowl around the wicket if he's bumping a batsman to get them out. For long periods in Brisbane he bowled around the wicket, but not bowling bouncers - bowling length. But doing so was pointless because it takes out the possibility for lbw, reduces the chances of bowled and caught behind and is generally unthreatening. In Sydney he tried bowling leg side bouncers for an entire spell and wasted every ball that spell. The problem is not the bowler's talent, it's his management.
The problem with the Australian side is its leadership, which is slow, unresponsive and is content with mediocrity. It must change or we will continue losing.