Is Craig McDermott on the money about our bowling attack?

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

Australia’s fast bowling coach Craig McDermott made a big call the other day when he said, “I think we’ve got the best attack in the world”.

No doubt many South Africans would have pricked their ears up.

McDermott’s theory will be put to the ultimate head-to-head test in February when Michael Clarke’s team takes on the world number one ranked Proteas in a three-Test series in the Republic.

Within hours of McDermott’s comments the ICC released its latest player rankings.

For the first time in quite a while South African spearhead Dale Steyn was not atop the list.

But while the name at the top of the tree may be different the nationality stays the same.

On the back of a seven-wicket haul in the engrossing opening Test of the series against India at Johannesburg, Vernon Philander (912 points) swapped places with Steyn (890) to still leave South Africa with a quinella at the top of the table.

Interestingly, Philander’s total of 912 points is four better than Steyn’s highest career mark that he registered in February this year.

Proteas’ beanpole Morne Morkel (11th, 704) is the third member of his team’s specialist pace bowling triumvirate.

The best-placed Australian is Ryan Harris (796) who comes in at number five, one place ahead of teammate Peter Siddle (786).

One of the biggest movers in the latest rankings is the rejuvenated Mitchell Johnson (663) who has rocketed to number 15.

So, in terms of the current specialist pace bowlers in operation for both Australia and South Africa, the Aussies have numbers five, six and 15 in the rankings while the Proteas possess numbers one, two and 11.

That would tend to indicate that Graeme Smith’s team holds a significant advantage.

The one x-factor however is the form of Johnson.

He has returned from Test exile with a far greater self-belief that has been bolstered by his ability to harness in unison both raw pace and control, two things that have not always gone hand-in-hand for the strongly built left-hander.

He was devastating in the opening two Tests of the current Ashes series with consecutive man-of-the-match awards.

He heads into the Boxing Day encounter having claimed 24 wickets in the opening three matches at an average of 15.5.

In mid-2009 Johnson reached his highest score in the Test bowler’s table when he registered 825 points – a number that would currently have him ranked number four in the world.

It could be argued that he is bowling as well nowadays as he did back then – some may even say better.

He is certainly a man on the rise at present and if he can continue to produce as he has this summer his points will likely rise quicker than any others mentioned above.

South Africa will be very wary of Johnson given that in early 2009 he twice broke Smith’s thumb and forced Jacques Kallis to retire hurt at Durban after a frightful blow to his helmet.

The Proteas has a significant player change ahead of the Australia series with Jacques Kallis announcing in the last 24 hours that today’s Test against India at Durban will be his last.

Aside from 13,174 runs (4th all-time) and 199 catches (second all-time) he has also taken 292 Test wickets from his 165 appearances.

Replacing Kallis will provide a few headaches for the selectors as he has been a genuine fourth pace bowler in the South African side for nearly two decades while also holding down the number four spot so superbly.

Australia will likely still field a batting all-rounder in the shape of Shane Watson who is ranked number 38 in the world with the ball.

While not necessarily a prolific wicket-taker, his tightness of line and length is a major plus to the Australian attack.

There are two areas where Australia does have a clear advantage over South Africa in the bowling department.

The first is the spin bowling area.

Nathan Lyon enters the Boxing Day Test having seen off Graeme Swann (who retires ranked number 15 on the current top bowlers’ list) as the best spin bowler in this Ashes series with ten wickets at 31.4.

He needs a further five wickets to become just the fifth Australian off-spinner to claim 100 Test scalps and is well on the way, like Swann, to become his country’s most prolific offie – Hugh Trumble is the Australian benchmark with 141 wickets.

Lyon’s 95 wickets have come at a cost of 33.0 in his 28 Tests to date, ranking him number 21 in the world.

His back-up role to the Aussie quicks this summer has been outstanding and he has captured some key wickets.

Contrast that with South Africa’s incumbent spinner, leggie Imran Tahir.

In 13 Tests he has captured 36 wickets at 43.1 and is ranked number 55 in the world.

Tahir is well-known for his propensity to put in woefully expensive and ineffective spells, something that Lyon has overcome.

Australia’s biggest advantage over South Africa with regard to their respective bowling stocks is the sheer depth within Australia’s ranks.

Beyond Steyn, Philander and Morkel there is not a lot with reasonable Test experience.

Some would say they don’t need to worry, which is all fine and true as long as injuries are held at bay – something that cannot ever be taken for granted as Australia can certainly attest to.

Should South Africa need to call-up a specialist quick for the series against Australia there is not a lot on offer in terms of proven experience over a prolonged.

30-year-old Rory Kleinvedlt has played four Tests for 10 wickets at 42.2 while 26-year-old Kyle Abbott has made one Test appearance, albeit a successful one with nine wickets against Pakistan and Marchant de Lange who has played two Tests for nine wickets 30.8.

Australia has Doug Bollinger back in career-best form (12 Tests, 50 at 26.0) – he has been in the Australian squad as cover for the past few Tests.

Several currently or recently sidelined quicks will be up and raring to go by the time Australia heads to South Africa.

Amongst them will be Ben Hilfenhaus (99 at 28.5), James Pattinson (47 at 26.4), Mitchell Starc (41 at 33.6), and Jackson Bird (13 at 23.3).

Beyond that there are ODI players who are yet to be awarded a baggy green like Nathan Coulter-Nile and Josh Hazlewood.

When the eagerly anticipated series gets underway early next year South Africa will rightly start as favourite.

Australia’s attack will be faced by a far more accomplished batting line-up than their Proteas’ counterparts will have to face.

But, if the Australian bowlers can replicate what they have achieved in this Ashes series they could go a long way to fulfilling McDermott’s prophecy.

Either way, it will be an intriguing contest to follow.

The Crowd Says:

2013-12-27T13:15:58+00:00

Mo

Guest


How about Herschelle Gibbs,Albie Morkel,Justin Kemp,Adrian Kuiper and Lance Klusener? Sure only Gibbs opened but all mighty stroke players.

2013-12-27T13:11:42+00:00

Mo

Guest


Volume of wickets is also a consideration...implies that Kallis has dismissed a far greater variety than Watto has on many different surfaces. Watson is highly skilled and Michael Holding was dead wrong when being dismissive about his bowling abilites.

2013-12-27T13:08:28+00:00

Mo

Guest


Technically no delivery is unplayable..reality is different..with reaction time of under half a second,a batsman has no chance on many occasions if a delivery moves late and he/she is out of position.

2013-12-27T13:04:17+00:00

Mo

Guest


Problem is Pakistan don't have genuine pace at the moment..Irfan is effective but very injury prone.Junaid is a very small,short guy and doesnt have express pace nor does he swing it back into the righties apart from rare occasions.They depend on Ajmal hugely..If Amir comes back then they would be approaching world class status.

2013-12-27T10:31:03+00:00

Adam

Guest


A huge percentage of wickets come from batsman error. Very few genuine unplayable deliveries are actually bowled

2013-12-26T23:57:33+00:00

Jake

Guest


Who's the tool now, Dexter...

2013-12-26T22:44:36+00:00

vocans

Guest


England has made us look better than we are, just as the Ashes tour to Blighty masked England's weaknesses and Australia's strengths. SA will be a proper measuring stick. I wish the series was happening here. I was very impressed with Amla when he first came here and it would be great to see him again, especially from the square leg or point boundary.

2013-12-26T21:04:08+00:00

Charging Rhino

Roar Guru


They lost

2013-12-26T19:55:10+00:00

Mo

Guest


Interesting call and very tough to pick a clear favourite amongst the 2 attacks...the bowlers are just so different....Harris vs Steyn, Johnson vs Morkel and Siddle vs Philander...If anything,currently,Johnson and Morkel from their respective teams look to be the most fearsome.Steyn and Harris the most skilled,Philander and Siddle the most steady The problem with a Johnson type bowler,in form, is that once he can be contained or at least survived against,the series is over.His tallies against the Poms have slowly started to recede but its too late in the series.The angle,variety and sheer pace make him a super awkward proposition and he has that ability to be a physical threat.He is bowling faster than ever and hit 155.7 top pace. Siddle is interesting..a medium pacer like Philander,although a touch quicker.he isnt the type of guy to run through a line up whilst Vern can...Philander edges him in overall ability and moving the ball both ways at his best. Nathan Lyons is ok and better than anyone the Proteas have.Overall agree with Billy...now with Kallis retired and big shoes to fill,Australia seem to have the edge,slightly in their bowling and are the best attack in cricket.I just hope the Proteas don't replace Kallis with a "bits and pieces" all rounder...id like to see Parnell ,with his left arm pacey variety and useful batting,promoted and given a long run in the test team as a 7 or 8.

2013-12-26T16:35:21+00:00

Wasim Ranamadroota

Roar Pro


Billy made two telling points subsequently which clarify his comparison with South Africa. 1. He mentioned "balance" meaning that if a spinner was needed we might have the edge over RSA. 2. He mentioned "back-up" or depth - if we were to lose Ryano and they were to lose Steyn, the Aussie replacement might edge the RSA replacement. Not saying I agree - I think he was trying to rile them up McGrath style, but less controversial if you consider his explanation.

2013-12-26T16:27:01+00:00

Wasim Ranamadroota

Roar Pro


+1

2013-12-26T16:24:46+00:00

Wasim Ranamadroota

Roar Pro


He isn't being a tool, he is helpfully answering your question. We see RSA on our screens all the time as he points out, we do not see RB RZ RP RSL or RI. YOU are the one who resorted to name calling. You could have said "Thank You."

2013-12-26T15:48:53+00:00

Vikram

Guest


Only if they play at home(in aus). . . . .

2013-12-26T15:24:59+00:00

Vikramsinh

Guest


Only if they play. . . . At home . . . . . Ho ho .ho.

2013-12-26T11:13:18+00:00

Vic

Guest


"Australia’s fast bowling coach Craig McDermott made a big call the other day when he said, “I think we’ve got the best attack in the world”. No doubt many South Africans would have pricked their ears up." Nah- don't think they would. It's typical Aussie talk- "we are the best the biggest the brightest"- if I didn't know better, I'd think y'all came over on the Mayflower from Texas......

2013-12-26T10:58:56+00:00

Dexter The Hamster

Guest


Don't be a tool Simoc. I understand perfectly, which was evident from my comment. India are also known as the Republic of India. Maybe you need to work on your understanding.

AUTHOR

2013-12-26T10:57:19+00:00

Glenn Mitchell

Expert


Which is a very good point Brian. The workload that Kallis has carried over 18 years of international cricket in all three forms of the game is phenomenal. The fact he had been so resilient is a credit to him.

2013-12-26T10:56:55+00:00

Vic

Guest


Dex- the Republic- as opposed to those who still curtsy to the queen.

2013-12-26T10:42:12+00:00

Brian

Guest


I'd back the South African attack who have done it for longer. The best respond when the pressure is on that is what Warne, McGrath & Steyn have shown again and again. So far when the heat has been put on Johnson & Harris they've failed or broken down injured. Pattinson and to a lesser degree Starc are better prospects then Abbot or De Lange but right now on curruent form the Saffers attack for mine. Pakistan too have Junaid, Irfan, Gul & Ajmal. They're batting is woeful and their management is Pakistan but as so often for talent they might too be number No 1.

2013-12-26T10:42:08+00:00


Suth Africa over the past few years didn't really have to use other bowlers than Steyn, Morkel and Philander, it does create that sense of we have no depth, however it is we don't have depth in experience (only) which Glenn aluded to. There is however kyle Abbot and Marchant de Lange in the wings who whiilst not having experience at internatinal level are the next in line.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar