Aussie fans maybe reacted to the media speculation that way, although it was noticeably more substantial ahead of '05, and normally had an introductory line along the lines of "while it has become tradition to forecast that an English team going into the Ashes represents a threat to Australian dominance, this time it is a forecast that does need to be taken seriously."people forget that, they also forget that the aussies didn't take it seriously, they were doing the 'yeah every ashes series we hear about this team that can beat us and it never happens'
This, exactly.Johnson
Lee
Clark
Siddle
Bollinger first drop.
Sorry mate, that got a bit confusing halfway through.i still don't think they really did, however it was more to do with a few players coincidentally being out of form at the same time than attitude.
notice the attitude ahead of the next attitude, you can't tell me they weren't pissed about how they folded in '05
Indeed. It's really quite arrogant to assume that you can only lose if you play **** - and it's not like it was a blow-out series either, or a series against a poor team.^^ Think that underplays just how good the cricket England played was - several of the Aussies did the reverse of folding, eg. Warne, Ponting, but they were fighting an inspired team, played for each other and out of their skins in periods.
It was interesting reading Gilchrist's autobiography, in terms of the fear that he said he always felt going into the Ashes that "this will be the one where the streak ends". People in the team, from his account, were obviously distracted, stressed, and not coping well with the challenge being thrown down, but Symonds' booze up aside, I can't think of anything to say they were taking England lightly. England were just too good.
What changed in 06/07 were the conditions, the ball, no Simon Jones, no Trescothick, the addition of a fit McGrath and Mike Hussey, the reemergence of a much more mature Clarke. To say that the Aussies were simply annoyed, and hence switched on is oversimplifying IMO.
So despite just hammering the main challenger to our crown in their own backyard after they beat us over here, the big test for the new players in the team is, apparently, going to be a series against a team who we beat 5-0 last start, who are now ranked #6 in the world and who just lost a series to the West Indies. Riiighht...Its been a while since I posted on here but I could not resist....
DAMN! How is that for a series win? I bet most Aussie supporters wrote them off before the tour....
Even I did. I would have been ecstatic with a series draw....
I would liken this series win almost with the '94/95 Windies tour win....similar inexperience, similar predictions from alot of supporters and media...
I look forward to the Ashes tour to see how the new boys really stack up..
don't get me wrong, england were awesome, but 06/07 they were READY like you wouldn't believe, and strangely, england just weren't. years of bashing the poms made them take it a little for granted i feel^^ Think that underplays just how good the cricket England played was - several of the Aussies did the reverse of folding, eg. Warne, Ponting, but they were fighting an inspired team, played for each other and out of their skins in periods.
It was interesting reading Gilchrist's autobiography, in terms of the fear that he said he always felt going into the Ashes that "this will be the one where the streak ends". People in the team, from his account, were obviously distracted, stressed, and not coping well with the challenge being thrown down, but Symonds' booze up aside, I can't think of anything to say they were taking England lightly. England were just too good.
What changed in 06/07 were the conditions, the ball, no Simon Jones, no Trescothick, the addition of a fit McGrath and Mike Hussey, the reemergence of a much more mature Clarke. To say that the Aussies were simply annoyed, and hence switched on is oversimplifying IMO.
i assure you a lot of planning went into 06/07, ponting particularly was burning after 05, and warne would have retired in 05 if they'd won, he came back only for the ashes.The motivation was nothing in 06/07. You can't keep up a level of adrenalin and intensity for five five-day tests just because you have something to prove. It's debatable whether desperation to succeed is good for a sports team anyway.
Ah, yeah, fair point. But i don't think that's what people generally mean when they say things along the lines of, "Australia won because they were fired up".i assure you a lot of planning went into 06/07, ponting particularly was burning after 05, and warne would have retired in 05 if they'd won, he came back only for the ashes.
Haha, because it might be too easy? You never want to be thinking like that...and on the upcoming series in england, it's starting to look a little dissapointing just quietly, i'm wondering if staying up late to watch it and being rooted at work the next day is really going to be worth it
The irony of that post is the fact that you've spent the last 20 minutes telling us that Australia lost in 2005 because they took the English too lightly.and on the upcoming series in england, it's starting to look a little dissapointing just quietly, i'm wondering if staying up late to watch it and being rooted at work the next day is really going to be worth it
believe it or not i'm not part of the australian cricket team