The Ashes: The good, the bad and the ugly

By Sporting Tragic / Roar Pro

The first five Tests of Darren ‘Boof’ Lehmann’s reign as the Australian cricket coach have now come and gone.

The Ashes are still in English hands – at least for the next three months – until they arrive in Australia. Now is an extremely apt time to assess the good, the average and the ugly of Australian cricket in its current state.

What do they need to fix? Do they need to keep the status quo?

The Good

Ashton Agar – Will this kid be a two-Test wonder? God, I hope not! For all the press that he received (quite rightly, mind you) for his 98 runs while batting at number 11 on debut, his bowling left much to be desired.

After taking only two wickets in the first two Tests, he was dropped and eventually sent home early from the tour to shake a virus. One has to wonder, will he play a Test again?

Will he be given an opportunity to develop his bowling at Shield level and then have another crack at the top level? I doubt they’ll pick him as a batsman.

Shane Watson – For all the troubles that he has supposedly been through off the field in the lead-up to this series, having the vice-captaincy stripped from him will be the best thing for him in the long term.

After the fifth Test, we may have – may – finally found a number three. His 176 in the final Test was his highest Test score and has earned him, in my view, the number three spot for the return Ashes in Australia (assuming he is fit).

Chris Rogers – He may have had to wait a long time between his first Test and this series, but he has established himself and deserves to start the summer with someone (more than likely, Warner) at the top of the order.

Age brings experience, and we need bucketloads of it at the moment. Rogers’s maiden ton was superb to watch and was a reflection of his determined temperament.

Peter Siddle and Ryan Harris – Harris’s selection as Australia’s ‘Man of the Series’ was absolutely justified. His bowling in every Test was superb.

Siddle’s line, length and accuracy were generally consistent throughout the whole series. Mitchell Starc, James Pattinson and others should take note. Now.

Steve Smith – At the start of the series, I was far from being a Smith supporter. Now, I may have to eat my words and admit that I’d underestimated him.

He had consistent scores and a great ton, albeit in the dead rubber in the fifth Test. Smith still needs to work on his technical deficiencies, but he is getting better. He is a long term number five or six for Australia. Forget his bowling, this man needs to taken under the wing by Mike Hussey, Allan Border and others.

The Average

Rotation policy – There were many casualties from this tour, and one has to wonder how many of them will play for Australia again. One has to be Usman Khawaja, and another, Phil Hughes.

Both the batsmen have been thrust into the side, and people have unfairly expected miracles straightaway. Just a memo, selectors – they aren’t Ricky Ponting, Mike Hussey or any other long term player you want to mention.

If they don’t score quickly, they get thrown on the trash-heap. Hughes already has been picked and dropped three times, and he hasn’t even played 20 Tests. It’s utter madness.

How can a player have confidence in his position in the team? If they aren’t good enough (another point for debate) – don’t pick them again and find someone new.

Matthew Wade is highly unlikely to play again for a while, at least one would think. Brad Haddin, despite his age, appears the preferred option and he’s a solid vice-captain.

Mitchell Starc was in and out. Lyon was out and in. So was Ed Cowan. And so too Jackson Bird. Please! Please Darren Lehmann, can we have consistency in the near future? The same eleven for two Tests in a row isn’t too much to ask, is it?

I’m going to touch on this soon in a post on Australian Cricket’s state of affairs. Watch out for that.

Michael Clarke – One decent score and some average captaincy from Pup, including blowups with umpires and the opposition.

The Ugly

The DRS System – Scrap it. It’s rubbish. Enough said. Give the power back to the umpires and only rely on human judgement.

David Warner – Brought disgrace to the national team before a ball was bowled and couldn’t handle the heat when he returned to the team.

In a nutshell:

When it comes down to it, this series was not close. It was 3-0 and a smidgen away from 4-0. I can hear you screaming at me, talking about the weather, tosses lost that could’ve been won, ordinary DRS decisions, and on it goes.

But the bottom line is, we didn’t score enough runs, and we sure as hell couldn’t get Ian Bell out.

There’re three months until the Gabba Test, and we’ve got a ton of work to do.

The Crowd Says:

2013-09-06T07:14:29+00:00

Steven McBain

Roar Guru


Good summary I think on the whole. I don't know enough about the Australian selection process to comment properly but I think in general most teams benefit from more continuity. I personally think Clarke captained pretty decently and I felt he was a lot more positive than Cook was on the whole, thought he rotated his bowlers well as an example. With regard to DRS, I strongly feel that abandoning technology is a backwards step. It's not the technology that is at fault in the main, it's the people using it, that and the means for recourse to the system. I wholly agree that needs to be addressed. TV coverage is not going to abandon the technology meaning that if the umpires can't access it and everyone else can, every wrong decision will continue to be panned and focused on. The technology exists, we can't pretend it doesn't, it just needs to be used properly. At the moment we have a monkey driving a Ferrari. The only thing I think you missed out is you started out by mentioning Lehmann's reign and yet made no reference to whether you thought he was good, bad or ugly! Does he need to be fixed?

2013-09-05T12:58:26+00:00

Hookin' YT

Guest


Horrid shot though. If he doesn't learn to play spin, he'll never succeed.

2013-09-05T11:40:35+00:00

chris mackinnon

Guest


the selection was rubbish 7 openers in the team basically same batsmen from india tour, middle order batsmen were are they im sorri where is forrest where is maddison, haddin, you cant expect clarke to make a hundred every game other batsmen cant bat a session total joke

2013-09-05T11:03:18+00:00

Praveen

Guest


+2

2013-09-05T09:06:31+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


They were doing exactly what they said. They knew Australia were desperate for a win, and tried to put pressure on them, thus opening the game up for England.

2013-09-05T08:22:28+00:00

Statler and Waldorf

Roar Guru


I agree with your "In a nutshell" summary - it was not closer than the score suggested like some would say BUT we had good sessions and good days and these will lead one day to having good matches. I am confident the next series will be closer

2013-09-05T04:42:56+00:00

JohnB

Guest


You're suggesting they were doing anything except having a bit of fun on the last morning of a game in a series they'd already won? Giving a lot too much credit for mine.

2013-09-05T04:37:21+00:00

JohnB

Guest


And zero pressure once they'd got past the follow on. Essentially, anything except any intent on their part.

2013-09-05T03:38:49+00:00

Vivek

Guest


Worse decision that i have ever seen, robbed the batsman of a big knock on a good batting track.

2013-09-05T03:25:27+00:00

Rob Barrow

Guest


Khawaja's DRS decision in Manchester was the ugly point for me, how the third umpire can get that wrong is beyond me.

2013-09-05T02:39:50+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


It doesn't answer the statement that England were just playing for the draw when they were throwing the bat merrily. This is first innings, before Clarke set any declaration.

AUTHOR

2013-09-05T02:20:14+00:00

Sporting Tragic

Roar Pro


James.....interesting points you make there. I am a Watto believer.

2013-09-05T00:43:43+00:00

James

Guest


i wouldnt call agar a 2 test wonder. a one test wonder doing something that he was not in the team to do and failing at what he was in the team to do. and i still reckon itll be a few dozen tests before watson scores another hundred haha

AUTHOR

2013-09-05T00:01:06+00:00

Sporting Tragic

Roar Pro


correct.

2013-09-04T22:31:15+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


5 men in catching positions versus 7 men on the boundary.

2013-09-04T22:03:16+00:00

ChrisUK

Guest


Do explain England scoring at a faster rate on the 5th morning than Australia did in their second innings please?

2013-09-04T21:38:38+00:00

Rob G.

Guest


Captaincy was average, leadership was atrocious.

2013-09-04T19:02:18+00:00

SuperEel22

Roar Guru


I wouldn't call Pup's captaincy average. If I was in his position I would've been going off as well. Without his declaration in the 5th Test we wouldn't have even been talking about that confrontation. Clarke kept interest in the match whereas Alastair Cook was doing everything possible to play for a draw.

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