The great Ralph Ellison once said ‘Cricket is to be lived on the field, not analysed from the stands, and humility is won by continuing to play in face of certain defeat.’ Or he would of if he actually played and watched cricket.
By tea time on the second day of the second test at Lords, Ninemsn’s crystal ball gave Australia an 8% chance of winning and England a 76% chance of winning.
For Australia to play out 3 days and one session in the face of such terrible odds gives one courage and strength of character or at least I hope so.
Australia was certainly outplayed by both England and the umpires. Where or with whom should the blame game start?
Rather than the usual finger pointing which typically aims to single out certain players, I have compiled my armchair list and wish to share it with all and sundry.
The first culprit is the toss.
Batting first was a tremendous advantage for the usual reasons and in particular because it largely shielded England from the horrors of day two.
With the barometric pressure dropping at a pace only matched by Mark Webber, the rain came in and out and some 13 wickets were lost in the day. For England that meant Strauss and the tail end. For Australia it meant the top order.
The second blame factor was the bowling.
To put it simply, the occasional spell of great bowling by Australia was surrounded by some very ordinary efforts. By contrast England bowled well for the majority of the match.
As an aside, and putting aside Flintoff’s excellent bowling in this match, does anyone else think Flintoff is overrated? He averages over 31 for god’s sake. For comparison and if I remember – correctly McGrath averaged around 21.
The third culprit was the umpires.
There is no doubt Australia was on the rotten end of some terrible decisions in both innings. I think the team has every right to complain about consistent umpiring.
Australia doesn’t seem to get much sympathy from the international cricket world but we really were done over here.
So what to do?
Australia’s second innings of 406 was the highest ever losing run chase by Australia.
It shows a determination to persist against the odds, the pitch and some great bowling. On the last day, the way the ball was moving sideways off the pitch it was a real testament that the team even made it to 400.
Kudos to Clark and Haddin. And kudos also for Johnson. He really looks like he could be a match winning batsman in that spot (ironic really!).
Australia has become so used to winning that the much needed mental strength to tough it out in the adversity has hardly been required in the last ten years.
Perhaps the last time was in England in 2005. The team should be patting itself on the back and looking forward to the next challenge. Bring it on!
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sheek said | July 21st 2009 @ 10:05am | Report comment
Well,
I have a suspicion that after doing everything but win the first test, the Aussies arrived at Lords thinking all they had to do was turn up, & it would be the first test all over again.
They will deny it of course, but they began the test playing like ‘millionaires’ – extravagant, wasteful.
I wonder if anyone has sat Mitchell Johnson down & given him a dressing down to boot. Then asked him if he has any problems outside the game, & needs help.
Mitchell, more than anyone or anything, is responsible for Australia being 0-1 down in the series. His bowling has been nothing short of rubbish. You don’t lose rhythm & form that suddenly, there must be something else distracting him.
Okay, he’s got the best looking WAG of all the cricketers, & his mum has aired dirty laundry. He’s got to pull it back together. I’m a huge fan of Mitchell, & I hope he sorts himself out very soon. Australia depends on him.
onside said | July 21st 2009 @ 10:44am | Report comment
Cricket and rugby are two complicated games.Last weekend , on opposite sides of the globe,
referees and umpires disproportionately impacted on the outcome of respective Test matches.
One,by interpreting rules to his own private whim, the other,by refusal that was as pigheaded
as it was obstinate to use technolgy that would have laid bare any illusion of competence.
Colin N said | July 21st 2009 @ 11:42am | Report comment
onside,
The great thing about cricket is that you have 20 lives to put a wrong umpiring decision right, sometimes in rugby, you may not get that opportunity, there’s a slight difference. If Australia get the rub of the green and win the next test, then I’m sure this will be forgotten………
………actually, on second thoughts, perhaps not.
Viscount Crouchback said | July 21st 2009 @ 9:21pm | Report comment
An astute article, David. The weather has been an enormous factor in this series. We saw at Cardiff and again at Lord’s that batting is considerably more difficult when the cloud cover comes over. England had the good fortune to bat when it was (mostly) sunny at Lord’s, and duly took advantage.
I shouldn’t be too worried if I was an Australian. The English won’t always win the toss, and they won’t always enjoy the best of the conditions. This series will see-saw wildly. It reminds me very much of England-v-South Africa in 2003, which finished 2-2.