Australia's killer instinct is back

By Hugh McDonald / Roar Rookie

Darren Lehman took the reigns of an Australian cricket team in a harrowing state in June 2013. Almost 14 months on, the side looks a shade of its abject former self and looks set to return to an era of winning.

While comprised of similar personnel to that of the ill-fated 2013 Champions Trophy, the Australian outfit that graced a sun-soaked Harare Sports Park on Monday against Zimbabwe played its cricket in a completely different manner.

It was clear from Lehmann’s first press conference that Australia was going to approach all facets of the game in an attacking and aggressive fashion. It was going to take more than just a change of ideals to reverse the fortunes of a team in crisis.

Execution of skills, particularly in high-pressure moments, was a must going forward. But it was more than just an execution of skills. After all, these players are professionals, of course they had the skill.

Lehmann has instilled a hunger and desire to win. He’s instilled a great sense of pride in representing Australia, and while you can see it in the attacking, big-hitting batting and the aggressive, body-line bowling, there is nowhere you can see it more than in the fielding where Australia hunt as a pack.

The 2013 Champions Trophy saw Australia hit rock bottom with their fielding. Dropped catches, over throws and schoolboy errors were a plenty. The fielding standards, that teams led by Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting prided themselves on, had disappeared.

Lehmann was a member of these teams and, along with the recently departed Mike Young and newly appointed fielding coach Greg Blewett, he is ensuring Australia has hunger and passion in the field. The desire to stop every single run reflects the commitment Australia has to regaining complete dominance in their national sport.

After 146 days since Australia’s last international match in any format, there has been a lot to like about their clinical performance in the first ODI against Zimbabwe. The aggression in every facet of Australia’s play was on show for all to see against a visibly weaker opposition.

There was plenty to make Lehmann happy. A brilliant opening stand from Aaron Finch and Brad Haddin, Mitchell Marsh making a fist of his role at first drop, more explosive batting from Glen Maxwell, tight fast bowling from Mitchell Johnson, a return to the ODI scene for Nathan Lyon and even a few wickets for Steven Smith were all highlights.

But it was a piece of fielding that reflected Australia’s aforementioned, newfound hunger to win that may have had the coach most impressed.

It was in the ninth over, and Zimbabwean Sikandar Raza crunched one off the back foot that was headed for the boundary. Lyon and Maxwell gave chase, Lyon managed to flick the ball just before the boundary. In the process though he flicked the ball up rather than back, and it took a diving Maxwell to flick the ball back over the boundary and in field, saving a certain boundary.

It’s this incredible desperation to salvage every single run in the field, and the killer instinct approach, that Lehmann knows will play a large role in returning Australia to its dominant position of years gone by.

A similar effort drew his praise in the earlier Tests this year against South Africa. South Africa were nine wickets down, well short of Australia’s target, and a loss was inevitable. Vernon Philander played a shot that seemed destined to roll to the boundary, whether it went for four or not would have very little influence on the result of the match.

But there was Australia’s oldest and arguably slowest member, Chris Rogers, racing to save a boundary. After the game the coach pointed out this effort, and praised how it was efforts like this that indicated the team had the “hunger and drive” to represent Australia, day in, day out.

The similar effort from Lyon and Maxwell on Monday would have certainly captured Lehmann’s attention, and will have given him solace in knowing that the team is heeding his directions. Australian fielding reached its lowest ebb under Mickey Arthur, and Lehmann made it clear from the outset that the approach to fielding reflects the way in which any side wants to play.

The desperation in the field against a minnow shows Australia will have no mercy in its conquest to reach the top, and along the way will evoke memories, or maybe even eclipse, the standards in the field set by Waugh and Ponting’s sides of the golden era.

The Crowd Says:

2014-08-27T05:12:44+00:00

Amith

Guest


Boof is the best coach in the world , he has changed it around for us

AUTHOR

2014-08-27T04:20:09+00:00

Hugh McDonald

Roar Rookie


Thanks BrumbyJack much appreciated! I can't see any changes being made to the side tonight. With George Bailey saying Clarke won't be back until the end of the tournament, he will remain sidelined. No one really failed with the bat in the first match so I doubt Phil Hughes will come in. The only question is weather Ben Cutting may be given a shot in place of Richardson or Starc, neither of whom did anything wrong, but more so just to change up the bowling attack/rotate the bowlers

2014-08-27T02:12:47+00:00

BrumbyJack

Guest


Hugh, good article mate. Enjoyable reading. Lets hope the Aussies give Sth Africa a good belting tonight. I would really like to see Finch, Marsh and co prosper against a very good Sth African attack. Has Australia gone into tonight with an unchanged line-up?

2014-08-27T00:18:57+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Guest


Good that they are hungry but Johnners is the reason they are back.

AUTHOR

2014-08-26T23:42:43+00:00

Hugh McDonald

Roar Rookie


Cynicism excused Allanthus! Appreciate your point, but you've also hit the nail on the head about the point I was trying to make!

2014-08-26T23:35:56+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


It's a fair point Hugh, that if players are putting in like that when the stakes aren't high, that's a good indicator. I love cricket too, but when the national side is playing and I flick straight past the channel because it's just another meaningless game and the commentators are talking like it's important but using the same tired cliches because they've run out of new things to say, and there are endless replays to determine if a run has been saved on the boundary or not when we can all see what happened on the first replay, and its not even the start of cricket season yet and we have months of this ahead, well…. you'll hopefully excuse my cynicism :)

AUTHOR

2014-08-26T23:15:05+00:00

Hugh McDonald

Roar Rookie


Thanks for the feedback Allanthus. I feel though, that the article placed very little emphasis on the actual match played against Zimbabwe. It was commenting on how things have change in Australian Cricket over the last 14 months, and a piece of fielding from Monday night's game certainly highlighted that change of mindset in the Aussie camp

2014-08-26T23:13:01+00:00

Sideline Comm.

Guest


Don't be the razor in our candy mate. It's been 146 long days since we've tasted international (mens) cricket. We're starving.

AUTHOR

2014-08-26T23:04:32+00:00

Hugh McDonald

Roar Rookie


I believe Mike Young was brought into the Australian set up on a short-term contract for the 2013/14 summer, Nudge. Lehmann still thought the fielding standards weren't up to scratch, so Young came in and tried to rectify the issue. Blewett's hiring would reflect Lehmann's desire to bring former players back into the coaching set up

2014-08-26T23:02:43+00:00

Sophie

Guest


This is awesome! I'll be reading more of your stuff!

2014-08-26T22:53:52+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


G'day Hugh. When I saw the headline and article I settled in for a nice satirical read calling out the ridiculous amount of meaningless cricket played and the weighting given to such trivialities. But it seems I was mistaken. It's great that you love your cricket mate but to draw any conclusions from a one-dayer against Zimbabwe, well…. I'm not so sure about that.

2014-08-26T22:49:49+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Yeah Sideline, hussey was the best runner between wickets I have ever seen. Does anyone know why Mike Young isn't fielding coach anymore? He was brought back by Lehmann and that is when our fielding became outstanding again. That last ashes series was the most brilliant fielding performance you could imagine

2014-08-26T22:35:41+00:00

Sideline Comm.

Guest


The fielding performances under Mickey Arthur were just not up the the standards our national team has set for themselves. It was horrible watching our team make the blunders we used to mock other teams for - missed balls, overthrows, drops - it was shameful. Three things for me highlighted Australian cricket in its golden era and seemed to separate us from the rest of the world: 1. Hard running between wickets and pushing for every loose single (Hussey was amazing at this); 2. The highest fielding standards, ensuring we did not allow any loose singles to the other team (Punter was still the best fielder I have ever seen); and 3. aggression on the pitch in all aspects of the game. It seems now we are finally getting back the last two, which is great for our game. I just think they should work on the first a little more. Batsmen like Watson and other big hitters seem to prefer to just smash boundaries than do the running, but every run counts and the 1% things are what separate teams.

Read more at The Roar