Aussie cricketing misery deepens

By Sam Lienert / Roar Guru

Australia’s season of cricketing misery plumbed new depths as New Zealand handed the home side a six-wicket thrashing at the MCG on Friday night.

Chasing Australia’s 5-225, the Kiwis romped home, reaching 4-226 with seven balls to spare.

After dangerous opener Brendon McCullum (43 from 75 balls) gave the visitors a solid platform, Ross Taylor (47 from 74 balls) and Grant Elliott (61 not out from 75 balls) rammed home the advantage.

The loss put Australia 2-0 down in the five-match one-day series against New Zealand and on a five-match losing streak overall, after three preceding losses to South Africa.

It means Australia will have to go unbeaten through the final three games against NZ, starting in Sydney on Sunday, to avoid their third series defeat of the summer, having already lost a Test and one-day series to the Proteas.

While NZ always looked comfortable in their run-chase, it was a calamitous 37th over for Australia, bowled by part-time off-spinner David Hussey, which signalled the beginning of the end.

The Kiwis started the over at 3-143, needing 83 off the remaining 14 overs at virtually a run a ball.

Taylor, on 37, gave Australia a chance to get back into the game when he lofted a shot deep into the leg-side, with Mike Hussey having to make plenty of ground but comfortably able to get both hands to the ball.

But he spilled the chance and the ball trickled over the boundary.

The following delivery David Hussey speared down leg-side, with neither batsman nor `keeper getting near it as it sped to the fine leg rope for five wides.

It helped the tally to 10 runs for that over and seemed to free the spirits of the NZ batsmen, who then plundered 17 off the next three to seize complete command.

Left-arm paceman Mitchell Johnson gave Australia some hope when he dismissed Taylor in the 42nd over, but Elliott and Neil Broom (25 from 21 balls) cruised home with an unbeaten half-century stand.

All-rounder James Hopes was the best of the Australian bowlers, picking up 2-30 from 10 overs during the middle of the NZ innings to peg them back temporarily, but paceman Ben Hilfenhaus yielded an expensive 0-57.

Adding to Australia’s pain, stand-in captain Michael Clarke earlier copped a nasty blow on the toe from NZ paceman Iain O’Brien, shortly before being bowled for 98.

Clarke and Mike Hussey (75) had staged a rescue effort to at least turn an Australian innings which started poorly into a target worth defending.

Clarke took to the field with a hole cut in his left shoe to avoid further pain, but did not seem restricted, moving freely and bowling tidily.

The match was watched by a small MCG crowd of 28,251, suggesting Australia’s dwindling form might have affected attendance, with the volume of support for the visitors indicating NZ fans made up a decent proportion.

Despite top-scoring and earning man of the match honours, Clarke said he felt a large share of the blame for Australia not getting a big enough total.

“I guess in the batting we were probably 20 or 30 short and I take responsibility for that,” he said.

“If I turn my innings into 130, it’s a different game, especially on that wicket.

“I think both Huss and myself found it pretty difficult against their spinners, the wicket was quite slow and we found it pretty hard to score so I think we were 30 runs short.”

Clarke was confident the toe injury would not stop him playing in Sydney.

“I’ll ice it tonight and see how it pulls up in the morning but I’m very confident it will be fine,” he said.

Blacks Caps captain Daniel Vettori was confident his side could clinch the series on Sunday.

“People perceive the SCG to be the wicket that New Zealanders should most enjoy, so we’re hoping it’s similar to the last two decks,” he said.

“They have suited us, those style of wickets.

“If we turn up there and produce what we did with the ball and in the field then I think we’ve got a chance of winning the series.”

The Crowd Says:

2009-02-07T08:35:57+00:00

Harry

Guest


Spiro I got one of those inane emails from CA whose main point was to prod me to buy tickets for the one dayer tomorrow. No thanks. I'm saving my match day allocation from Mrs Harry for a few Tahs games, and the Hong Kong sevens, though am attempting to disuise that as a work trip ... I sent a reply that as a matter of urgency they needed to: 1) Publicly reprimand Haddin for his carry on about the legitmate NZ complaint. haddin needs to apologise. 2) Explain why Neilson is coach No reply from CA.

2009-02-07T05:12:57+00:00

Spiro

Guest


Leftarmspinner, you are 100 per cent correct. Daniel Vettori was talking on television after the match about how all the players of his team had responded well to the plans laid down for them by the coach and captain. And this is the point. There were a number of players in the NZ side who would struggle to make the state sides in Australia, in any form of the game. But the NZers accepted the loss of Jesse Ryder (who would have formed a devasting opening partnership with McCullum) and worked how how to win with only two (McCullum and Ross Taylor) quality ODI batsmen. The NZers correctly appraised the MCG pitch, too, and played two spinners. And these two blocked up the Australian run flow in the middle overs, rather like stuffing huge wads of cotton wool down a sink. Where was the planning in the Australian side? David Warner has clearly not been given any coaching into a method of hitting out strongly in the opening overs. The fielding was poor. The bowling badly disciplined with 11 no balls compared with the NZ one no ball. And to think that the coach Tim Nielsen has had his contract renewed for more years well before it was up for renewal. There was never any explanation for this, aside from the inadequate comment that he'd done a good job so far. The way things are going with Australian cricket, along with the poor performance of England so far in the West Indies, the Ashes series this year will be between two teams that can't aspire to being anywhere near the best in the world. As leftarmspinner notes, where is the outrage from the cricket community about the leadership (or lack of leadership) at all levels, especially with the Board of Cricket Australia about this terrible fall from grace. When NZ supporters can flaunt banners taunting the fall from grace of the Australian ODI team, things are going seriously wrong.

2009-02-07T04:55:36+00:00

MarkR

Guest


hayden - I'm with you. I don't gloat when the Wallabies lose (have too much respect for them), but the Aus cricket side, that's a different story.

2009-02-07T03:35:27+00:00

hayden

Guest


I love it. This just gets better and better.

2009-02-07T01:36:22+00:00

LeftArmSpinner

Roar Guru


The problems are systemic and start at the top. 1. The Chairman of CA must go. He has presided over the debacle that is now Cricket in Australia. 2. Selectors, Coach, Captain and Vice Captain. All need to go. How many series do we need to lose before someone is accountable?!!! 3. Bring back Buchanan, bring Langer in as his assistant, with a view to him taking over in 18 months. 4. Promote Katich to Captain in the interim. One of the youngsters, possibly Hughes, yes, Hughes should be groomed to take over. (I am presuming that he is a combative, determined, sensible sort of player, judging by his training regime) 5. Return to the work ethic and competitiveness of the Border/Simpson era. 6. Position Ponting and Clark as batsman. Nothing more, nothing less. 7. Reclaim the Australian cricket team, umpires (and every other person with starring roles) from KFC. It is an insult and just brings shows the depths of the situation and attitude that pervades the team and CA. 8. Find the best young players, a team of Hughes' and build another dynasty around a strong work ethic and uber-competitive spirit. 9. Forget having an allrounder. All 11 players can bat.

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