For an Ashes comeback, Australia must rediscover patience

By Geoff Lemon / Expert

It’s fair to say that expectation can be a misleading accomplice. For months in the lead-up to the first Test of the 2015 Ashes, English pessimism accommodated Australian ebullience.

The sense was strong from fans and pundits that Australia’s long lack of success in the United Kingdom was a particularly egregious accounting error that would soon be put to rights.

It was easy to get swept away by rushing adrenaline. Mitchell Johnson would have his first crack at English batsmen since tearing through them like tissue paper 18 months ago. Mitchell Starc would have his first since the devastation he’d wrought in a triumphant World Cup.

Josh Hazlewood had been the perfect back-up combination of threat and frugality, taking wickets of his own while giving no release. Nathan Lyon had passed Hugh Trumble as Australia’s most prolific off-spinner.

They had knocked off 40 West Indies wickets in no time, and the expectation was for more of the same.

For the first hour in Cardiff it looked like expectation would make itself manifest. Hazlewood produced a classic early slips dismissal to send back Adam Lyth. Lyon came on early to defeat Alastair Cook with extra bounce and a nicked cut.

Starc produced fast full swing to pin Ian Bell, then nearly had Joe Root leg before, then had him dropped. A matter of time until the job was done.

At which point began a lesson in patience that extended over that whole first innings. Root and Gary Ballance gave half chances aplenty but never fully extended one. They stayed around, and the changing game cohered around them.

Even for those of us who watch or play an inordinate amount of Test cricket, it’s still easy to lose its rhythm. Accustomed to thinking in highlight reels, we can view the slow build with frustration or a lack of clarity. We jump to absurd conclusions.

When Root and Ballance were new to the crease, they were doomed to be part of a lightning collapse. After half an hour, they were destined to bat forever.

Australia’s bowlers would destroy them. Australia’s bowlers were overrated. Unstoppable. Toothless. Ballance and Root wouldn’t last five minutes. They would bat the full five days.

By the time Ballance was dismissed he’d made 61. They’d put on 153. VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid it was not. But the full gamut of emotion around it had been run. The real point was that the pitch was not deadly and the partnership was resilient.

In these conditions bowling sides have to call on patience. The good ones settle into a calm and considered approach, tying down the scoring while trying to produce deliveries with enough nagging threat to eventually be realised.

They had better learn how. The wicket in Cardiff was not, contrary to many reports, inordinately slow. It was good enough to produce 22 wickets and 750 runs by early on day three.

But there are unlikely to be any pitches this summer that offer the kind of speed and bounce that would suit Australian bowlers.

In Cardiff, the attack kept dragging short on a surface doing nothing to support it. The bowlers were frustrated, boundary balls were given away.

It was partly England’s aggressive approach, but partly the effect that had on the bowling side. Even Hazlewood went at three and a half runs an over in the match, Johnson and Starc at four and a half.

In the first innings, only after Hazlewood underlined his importance by removing Ballance was a breach created. From there, the value of persistence showed itself. Wickets gradually came, seven by the end of the day, the rest the next morning.

It was frustrating, no doubt: a morning when Moeen Ali and England’s bowlers added 87 in 14 overs. But sometimes all a bowling side can do is keep dishing up the ball and wait the innings out.

Patience remains more important on this tour than dynamism and aggression and any comments about ‘brands’. Even on slow tracks, the side with the better pace attack should win. They’ll just win more slowly. But where they lose patience, that advantage will vanish.

Aggression is the jelly in the trifle – delicious and moreish, but it can’t exist without the surrounding architecture of sponge to contain and support it. All things must be housed in context.

Not everything can happen instantly for Australia this series, a lesson both for the team and those who follow them. For the former, a successful comeback from 1-0 down will depend whether they can heed it.

This was first published on Wisden India.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2015-07-21T10:21:56+00:00

Geoff Lemon

Expert


Unless Marsh does another hamstring before the series is out.

AUTHOR

2015-07-21T10:20:25+00:00

Geoff Lemon

Expert


He looked pretty dodgy watching live - lots of shuffling and edges and good fortune. But that can happen to anyone against a high quality spell, and they can still survive and prosper.

AUTHOR

2015-07-21T10:19:05+00:00

Geoff Lemon

Expert


The batsmen certainly switched up that approach at Lord's. But that's another piece. I was more interested in the bowling this time.

2015-07-15T18:01:03+00:00

ColinP

Guest


Don I'm assuming you're well travelled in the Fremantle, Perth area but have never visited the uk, thus you can't comprehend the alluring quality of English chips

2015-07-15T17:59:03+00:00

ColinP

Guest


You get 5 points on Ronans bingo card

2015-07-15T16:28:35+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


So what you're saying is, is that he has no substance. Fair enough, but I thought you were a fanboy?! You Aussies and your crushes...you're just so darned fickle.

2015-07-15T16:23:00+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


You do know what a tryst is...right? Or have you just read about them in magazines?

2015-07-15T15:20:30+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


This seems to be a summary of Tuesday's news...but only 12 hours ago.

2015-07-15T15:18:06+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


He need not worry about that. You guys will remove it in a tryst. Chips are a staple diet for you guys.

2015-07-15T15:14:26+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Great name btw, I know cricket. However you do seem like a very angry individual with a huge chip on your shoulder; probably best to lay off the sauce though as it will only exacerbate those two afflictions.

2015-07-15T15:02:46+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Shaun Marsh is not a batsman to TRIFLE with. He is sponge, custard and the jelly. Bring back Shaun.

2015-07-15T14:58:10+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Fancy choosing a Geordie accent when you have a choice. If he was going to pick a local accent from all the choices in England, why not South African or Pakistani? At least you can understand them.

2015-07-15T10:58:13+00:00

vineet kumar

Roar Rookie


Mitch starc is Not fully fit yet! is he?? maybe not..i think he needs to be rested for the 2nd test..so that we can get a fully fit Mitch for the remaining of Ashes.But he is in the team sheet for the lords test..maybe because Aussies dont have able replacement for him...Aussie Ashes squad of 18 members is consists of many passengers like Cummins,Siddle,watson,and Haddin...All these 4 players are not at their respective best..certainly they are not the best players in. Australia..Jason Behrandroff is certainly in a better shape than a half fit Cummins,siddle is good but not the best ,Abbott would have been a better choice, watson is just A Liability and even James Hopes is a better allrounder than him...Haddin was never a world class player, Wade is a deserving candidate.I think Aussie Selectors should read this comment from an Aussie cricket fan from India.

2015-07-15T09:06:56+00:00

Mucker

Guest


Stokes moved to England when he was about 10 mate. He has a Geordie accent!

2015-07-15T05:28:10+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


All correspondence from Art, whether it's via comments or otherwise, has his info...

2015-07-15T05:04:11+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


Thanks Anthony!

2015-07-15T05:01:22+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


I actually quite like it when the pitch has some pace and bounce in it as it often means that there is something there for the bowlers to work with if they bowl well, but the ball comes nicely onto the bat meaning the runs can also flow. One of the reasons I tend to like how Australian pitches generally are (ie not how they were last summer, just dry, flat and boring with nothing at all for the bowlers!)

2015-07-15T04:58:33+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


I definitely had it in there, must have edited it a couple of times before posting and the name disappeared. Yes, talking about Warner.

2015-07-15T04:57:49+00:00

Anthony Condon

Guest


Reporting this comment to flag a mod to remove the personal data from that post; guessing that wasn't deliberate.

2015-07-15T04:56:32+00:00

Anthony Condon

Guest


"Aggression is the jelly in the trifle – delicious and moreish, but it can’t exist without the surrounding architecture of sponge to contain and support it. All things must be housed in context." That's one of your best :) The current Australian side knows how to win. Unfortunately, it seems like that's all they can do. When they have the game by the scruff of the neck and everyone is bouncing around and chipper then everything seems to go according to plan. However, and it doesn't even take a collapse, or being under attack, it can just be the regular change in pace of test cricket, but the Australians don't seem to be able to switch gears. I don't know if this is because a lack of game plan flexibility, or something mental in the team, or something else, but there were times during the first test when Australia looked great, despite England's response, and times when England looked average and Australia were unable to capitalise.

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