With bat or ball, Johnson is Australia's chief destroyer

By Darshan Kawar / Roar Pro

With Australia at 4/221 before start of the third day in Brisbane, India appeared to have the upper hand. But Steve Smith looked strong in his innings overnight, and Mitchell Marsh had just came in. To gain control of the match, India needed quick wickets.

In the first hour the Indian bowlers took the wickets of Marsh and Brad Haddin and were looking to gain handsome first innings lead.

Then Mitchell Johnson walked out at No. 7 and started to attack. Suddenly, the pressure was back on India.

Johnson is a natural stroke-maker but not a consistent run-maker, still he wasn’t afraid to play his natural game which turned out to be very fruitful for Australia.

Thanks to some wayward bowling by the Indian quicks and Ravi Ashwin, Johnson reached 50 in no time and by lunch Australia were in a strong position.

Johnson was putting balls to the fence and over it and was especially harsh on Varun Aaron and Ashwin, who bowled too short, full or wide to him. The Indian bowlers had no plan for Johnson as he cut, pulled and lofted with ease to score quick-fire 88.

He appeared set to notch up his second Test century, and as Smith scored his first Test century as captain Australia were primed to take the lead. Adding 148 runs for seventh wicket in just 160 balls was a turning point in a match which is now evenly poised, with Australia gaining a psychological advantage over India.

The Indian batsmen have their work cut out to remain in the match, thanks to the best counter-attacking innings I’ve seen in recent times.

The Crowd Says:

2014-12-24T19:15:11+00:00

sanjay dantu

Guest


please test pilter groups

2014-12-20T09:25:05+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


Johnson can look the complete batsman at times, it's hardly down to emulating Smith as he's done it quite a lot before. Very talented player. Josh Hazlewood exceeded expectations certainly.

2014-12-20T03:12:13+00:00

jammel

Guest


Johnson batted at #8 in fact. Johnson is Australia best all rounder. He is in fact probably our only true all rounder. He deserves a place in the XI of course for his stronger suit (bowling). But he is also handy in another suit (batting). The same cannot really be said about the likes of Watson, Henriques, McDonald, Mitchell Marsh and others that have been tried of late. E.g. Watson isn't in our best six batsmen.

AUTHOR

2014-12-20T02:02:29+00:00

Darshan Kawar

Roar Pro


Agree Craig

2014-12-19T23:20:00+00:00

Craig Watson

Guest


I reckon our tail, particularly Mitch Johnson, was inspired by the deeds of his new skipper. It just snowballed from there. Some of those strikes by Johnno and Hazlewood would do a top order player proud.

2014-12-19T23:17:26+00:00

Craig Watson

Guest


Good read Darshan: Steve Smith has done precisely what he has been doing the past 18 months...saving Australia. More often than not our new skipper comes in when our top order are in disarray and steadies the ship with a mixture of patience, good temperament and a solid technique. If there is a player who has improved more than Steve Smith in the past 18 months. I would like to meet him. What an amazing effort to become our youngest ever player to hit a century on his captaincy debut.

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