ASHES: Australia's nail-biting loss - how can we win?

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Did Australia get more out of this Test? What changes will be made to the lineups? Should the DRS have been man of the match? Has Haddin saved his bacon? How will Australia attempt to counter Anderson?

How can Australia counter Anderson?
James Anderson is an irresistible force. The England spearhead’s effectiveness is rarely blunted regardless of the state of the pitch, the state of the ball or the state of the match.

With the new cherry he is capable of gaining curve in both directions as well as generous seam movement thanks to deft changes in his wrist position and release point.

Once the ball sheds its youthful lustre, Anderson retains his potency by bounding to the crease with his left hand masking the ball in order to leave the batsman guessing about the identity of the next delivery.

His herculean spell of 13 overs, 3 for 29 to start the fifth day brought his side to the brink of victory. When the other bowlers could not finish what he started, the sublime swing merchant returned to dash Australia’s hopes of a miraculous triumph.

Just how can Australia stop Anderson from making similar inroads throughout the series?

Do they instruct their stroke makers to attack him in an effort to disrupt his rhythm? Or do their batsmen stonewall incessantly while going hard at the other bowlers?

Will Australia take more out of this match?
The overwhelming majority of cricket pundits and followers considered Australia not to have even the faintest chance of beating England in this series.

Yet, save for a string of line-ball decisions which went against them, Australia could be holding a 1-0 lead in this series.

England were exposed yesterday for their over-reliance on James Anderson and skipper Alastair Cook’s unimaginative, reactive tactics.

The Aussies have tasted blood and will enter the second Test with good reason to be confident. They managed to rattle the favourites despite being well below their best both with ball and willow.

But they still have giant concerns over the continued frailty of their batting, particularly when confronted with the moving ball.

So which side will take more out of this epic contest?

Australia will feel they have exposed numerous weaknesses in the English side which can be exploited over the next nine Tests.

England, meanwhile, have the benefit of receiving a resounding wake-up call without the sickening feeling of defeat.

I would wager that once the exaggerated emotions subside, Australia will identify more positives out of this contest than England will.

What changes will Australia make??
Australia crave consistency in the makeup of their side but it would not surprise to see them make a change for the next Test.

The man most vulnerable to receiving dreadful news from the selectors would appear to be Ed Cowan. Displaced from his opening role, Cowan was tasked with batting for time and frustrating England’s incisive attack at first drop.

Instead he twice donated his wicket to England playing cavalier strokes at inopportune moments.

After 18 Tests in as many months, Cowan’s time may be up. He has been given more opportunities than most State batsman could conjure up in a dream.

If Australia do drop Cowan, their chosen replacement will indicate much about the team management’s mindset.

The conservative option is Queenslander Usman Khawaja, who has a reputation for taming pace attacks on lively decks at State level.

The gamble would be to select bombastic former opener David Warner, recently banished from the one day side for clouting English batsman Joe Root in a nocturnal stoush.

Khawaja is to my mind the superior option at first drop, a role which will require a steady hand this series against the puzzling swing of Anderson and co.

What changes will England make?
Winning sides are typically reluctant to make unforced alterations to their lineup. But England will be mindful of how close they came to a shock defeat and how much of a liability Steven Finn was over the past five days.

In the opening session of day five, the big quick came on to replace Anderson, who had completed a sensational 13 over spell, and immediately bled 20 runs from two overs. His untimely waywardness forced Cook to make a hasty bowling change.

Recognising how difficult it is to score freely against Anderson and Swann, the Aussies have clearly targeted Finn, assaulting him early in his spells.

The frontrunners for the third seamer role appear to be Graham Onions, so effective in the 2009 series, and one of England’s heroes from 2010-11 Tim Bresnan.

The latter is likely to get the nod given his greater ability with the willow as England look to match the output of Australia’s productive tail end.

Hadding saves his bacon
Heading into the fifth day Brad Haddin was enduring one of the worst matches of his Test career.

Dislodged for just a solitary run in the first dig, his efforts were similarly unimpressive behind the stumps, where he turfed two catches, including a pivotal chance off centurion Ian Bell in the second innings.

Under mounting pressure, Haddin belied his attacking instincts early in the first session, adding just 11 runs from the first 40 balls he faced.

Cognisant of how tricky it was to play with belligerence against the soft ball, he waited patiently for England to exchange it for a shiny version before initiating his counterpunch.

In the 84th over the ‘keeper switched gears, lofting Anderson over cover for an adventurous boundary. He then set about peppering the leg side outfield with enterprising, often pre-meditated strokes.

Haddin slog swept Swann and opened his stance to the quicks in a fashion more commonly associated with the shortest form of the game.

The audacity of his strokeplay caught England off guard and left Alastair Cook scrambling to make fielding and bowling changes.

Australia will hope the confidence gained from such an innings will flow on to Haddin’s glovework.

Did DRS deserve to be man of the match?
Perhaps never before has the Umpire Decision Review System played such a substantial role in a Test match.

While some will excitedly argue that it robbed Australia of victory, the truth is decision reviews worked in favour of both sides at times in this Test.

But the drama attached to many of the successful reviews was so intense it beggared belief.

How fitting that the match likely to go down in history as “The Trent Bridge DRS thriller” was decided by yet another review when Haddin was given out on video replay.

From the perplexing Jonathan Trott dismissal in England’s second dig, to the furore-inducing Stuart Broad edge-that-apparently-wasn’t, the DRS was conspicuous either in its presence or absence.

We can only hope its contributions will be scarcer over the next nine Ashes Tests.

How calm is Ashton Agar?
Unerring poise is not an attribute typically associated with a 19-year-old Test debutant.

Agar, however, had already demonstrated during his infantile First Class career that he possessed unnatural composure under pressure.

The gifted all-rounder was the architect of a thrilling and unlikely Sheffield Shield victory for the Warriors against Tasmania in February when he cracked an unbeaten 77 in the fourth innings against a gun Tasmanian attack featuring James Faulkner, Ben Hilfenhaus and Luke Butterworth.

Yesterday, it was almost as if he was auditioning for a part in “Cricket on Ice” such was his coolness at the crease.

He batted with circumspection for almost two hours, rarely looking threatened until he was undone by a Jaffa from Anderson.

The boy’s calm is outranked only by his talent.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2013-07-17T03:58:31+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I'd happily have leg theory permitted in this series if we could have DB at first drop.

AUTHOR

2013-07-16T13:03:22+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Haha I wished I had similarities to Agar but he is far more dashing (and talented) than I.

AUTHOR

2013-07-16T12:59:00+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


The softest 5-for you've ever seen? Really? All five of his wickets were batsmen. The ball that bowled Root was an absolute Jaffa while the wickets of Pietersen and Bell were both great deliveries in the channel of uncertainty.

2013-07-16T09:17:45+00:00

Deccas

Guest


Both of patto's top order wickets were pretty key. He is a really dangerous bowler and I think he will come good throughout the series. I think that Starc bowled very well, he certainly was far less expensive than pattinson. siddle is undroppable because of his five for but it was the softest 5 wicket haul ive ever seen. arguments can be made for dropping any of the quicks and id be okay with it no matter what way it goes.

2013-07-16T09:13:56+00:00

Glenn Innis

Guest


This discussion is already dead but supereel I dare to dispute what you say..Sure Jardine came up with leg theory but he needed a bowler fast and good enough to turn it into reality and Larwood was up to the job,Also I think it is pretty silly to say they didn't blunt Bradman, fifty something series average by a man who had a career average just shy of one hundred indicates they achieved their goal in that respect.

2013-07-16T07:05:24+00:00

Andrew

Guest


I think the bowlers generally did ok - don't think any of them deserved a poor rating, they just weren''t as good as Anderson, and were bowling at a far better batting side. The three following innings showed that nailing England for 215 at the start should have set up a match winning lead. Watson did well with the ball - 6 overs for 2 at one stage is terrific for a 4th change bowler, and I am anything but a fan of his.

2013-07-15T18:27:08+00:00

Bearfax

Guest


Uh huh. OK. So the apparent similarity in your picture on these forums with young Agar is just purely coincidental, an accident of nature, an aberration, and you arent his first cousin. Is that what you're trying to tell me. Uh huh. Yep. Uh huh. Sure there are no spin doctors in your family Ronan? No? Uh huh. OK...snicker snicker

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T16:46:15+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Haddin got Australia close to victory playing his strokes so it seems counter-intuitive to go into your shell at that point.

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T16:30:09+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


No Bearfax I'm saying that he had a greater impact in the first Test than any player bar Anderson. That's why I think it would be madness to drop him.

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T16:27:15+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


That they did.

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T16:26:08+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


:(

2013-07-15T14:51:05+00:00

Bearfax

Guest


Err Ronan I have conceded regarding young Agar but arent you pushing his barrow a little strongly identifying him as second best this series after only one game. I hope you dont fall into that Micky Arthur trap of being enamoured by one or two great performances and then followed by mediocrity as has been seen with Quiney, Shaun Marsh, Cowan, Ferguson etc. He's good but lets not suggest he's a Super Warne just yet, shall we?

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T14:17:50+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Agar trails only Anderson as the best of 22 players so far in this series so dropping him would be absurd.

2013-07-15T14:13:48+00:00

JMW

Guest


Ouch, you have me fried Ronan...a bit like onions.

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T14:01:06+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Cheers

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T14:00:15+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


C'mon JMW we expect greater wit than that!

AUTHOR

2013-07-15T13:59:19+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


He was my number one pick bowling-wise prior to the series but really lacked rhythm over the Test. He took 5-170 for the Test and of those five wickets only two were batsmen. Starc, by comparison, took 5-135 but four of his wickets were top order batsmen. I really don't know who should be dropped/or not? Lucky I'm not a selector!

2013-07-15T13:48:46+00:00

JMW

Guest


I don't think we are related Bearfax, but I tell you what...stand against that cretin Rudd and I'll get you 5 votes, right off the bat!

2013-07-15T13:22:17+00:00

JMW

Guest


By the way the chick in the Bad Idea T-Shirts on this page has a great set of lungs. I just thought I'd own up to what keeps me coming back here lol. ;)

2013-07-15T13:20:25+00:00

JMW

Guest


I've never seen a bee's wang but I've heard they can be a real prick!

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