Australia closing in on No. 1 Test ranking

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Australia are close to reclaiming the number one ranking in Test cricket. Given they are a flawed, rebuilding side laced with rookies it’s an indication that, at present, there are no commanding teams in the Test game.

Weather permitting, Australia are overwhelming favourites to beat the Windies in the ongoing SCG Test to notch a 3-0 series win.

Australia would then be within striking distance of nabbing the top ranking. To claim it, they would need two things to happen.

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First, they would require England to beat South Africa in their ongoing four-Test series, by any margin. Considering England are 1-0 up, are in an unloseable position in the second Test, and injuries have reduced South Africa’s bowling attack to a West Indies-like standard, the tourists are odds on to claim that series.

Second, Australia would need to win their upcoming two-Test series in New Zealand by any margin. Even a draw in that series, assuming England beat South Africa, could be enough to put Australia equal-first in the rankings with India.

Regardless of how the next two months of Test cricket pans out, one of Australia, India or South Africa will be in first place. Yet, right now, none of those three teams are anything closed to the finished article, with each having several major weaknesses.

The past year has been the first time in a long time that we haven’t had either a great or at least a really good Test team. Up until about the time of Graeme Smith’s retirement last year, South Africa had been a stellar Test team for more than six years.

Just before Smith retired, England’s Test team also had reached the end of an area, with stars Graeme Swann, Kevin Pietersen, Matt Prior and Jonathan Trott all out of the side for various reasons. England had been past their best for about 18 months at that point after a golden era from 2004 to 2012 during which they were a formidable unit.

In the mid-to-late-2000s, England, Australia and South Africa all boasted talent-rich sides which were considerably better than any of the current Test line-ups.

South Africa are the current number one team and potentially could remain in that spot even if they don’t beat England in their current series. Fresh from a humiliating 3-0 loss in India, the Proteas are a vulnerable, ageing side with major issues on and off the field.

Their most important player, paceman Dale Steyn, is out injured again and at rising 33 years old there is talk of a possible retirement in the near future. There also has been conjecture about the Test futures of other gun players AB de Villiers and Vernon Philander.

Even with all three of those players fit and on the field, South Africa still would be hampered by a shaky batting line-up. The current second-ranked side India have earned that lofty spot despite several years of utterly abysmal efforts away from home.

India have been so woeful outside of their own country that they make Australia look like a brilliant travelling team. They have won just three of their past 27 Tests away from home. To have a number one side in the world which is so impotent outside of their unique home conditions would be farcical.

Australia, meanwhile, had a fantastic run in Tests from the 2013-14 Ashes to the 2015 Ashes, during which they had an 11-3 win-loss record, and recorded remarkable series victories – 5-0 over England and 2-1 in South Africa.

Now, though, they are an extremely inexperienced side trying to rebuild after the loss of six players who had formed the backbone of the team during that successful period.

There is plenty to like about Australia’s young team. It has a potent attack despite the retirements of two of the elite bowlers in the game Ryan Harris and Mitchell Johnson.

Meanwhile, superstars Steve Smith and David Warner are surrounded by players who have made bright starts to their Test career in Adam Voges, Usman Khawaja and Joe Burns.

But their line-up is punctuated by players who are unproven in tough conditions. Plundering runs on home decks is one thing. Transferring that form to New Zealand and Sri Lanka, the venues for their next two tours, will be an entirely more difficult task.

Like South Africa and India, Australia are not anything close to the standard we typically associate with the number one Test team. The next three teams in the rankings – Pakistan, New Zealand and England – all have plenty of talent in their XIs.

Pakistan have been brilliant in their adopted home of the UAE and over the next 12 months face the real challenges of performing in Australia and England. New Zealand, meanwhile, are a vastly improved Test side but do not have a single big series win to their name in years.

England are the most hyped team in the Test game at the moment thanks to their barnstorming start to the series in South Africa. Yet England won only one of their four Test series last year and could not even beat the lowly West Indies in the Caribbean, just weeks before Australia absolutely destroyed the Windies.

For the rest of this year, the number one Test ranking looks likely to be passed around between a couple of teams. That will be somewhat fitting, as no side in the world is even close to deserving it at present.

The Crowd Says:

2016-02-21T03:13:50+00:00

Andrew

Guest


Strange of the star players mentioned for england, 3 of them were born in south africa. There is no english team.

2016-01-06T00:34:34+00:00

Bobbo7

Guest


Yes, the WI tour has been a waste of time basically. The NZ series was good, albeit NZ did not turn up for the first game and the pitch ruined the second.

2016-01-05T23:53:12+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


Just who is responsible Suneer? People simply will get fed up with going to the cricket and watching these run fests where more than 1000 runs are scored in the first two innings(almost 13000 in this SA test) The true cricket purist wants to see a fair contest between bat and ball. At present only the batsman is flourishing and the bowler is fast becoming an extinct species.

2016-01-05T13:27:55+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Except when we are back on top. Not bad to do it so quickly with more than half the team retired in the last semester. Pretty good country, Oz.

2016-01-05T13:16:49+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Get Paris to London.

2016-01-05T13:11:56+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


He should get a County contract this year.

2016-01-05T12:57:50+00:00

Suneer Chowdhary

Roar Guru


Yep, exactly, surprised with the WACA pitch against NZ & some of those last year against India too, which is a problem at some other places too - like the ongoing Test at Cape Town and sometimes in New Zealand as well. The boards & the ICC need to realise how the one single major factor that's probably killing interest in Tests is the nature of pitches.

2016-01-05T11:53:51+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Exactly. The socceroos went over and played just after the cricketers pulled out, but their security staff said fly in and fly out as quick as you can. Think they flew in day before game and flew out straight after the game. Bit different to the cricketers who would have been there for a month

2016-01-05T11:42:35+00:00

Steele

Guest


So true, my interest has dipped accordingly. Consistently flat pitches do nothing for the viewers at home. It also gives visiting teams more of a fighting chance which irks me, as other teams like England and India produce pitches to favour the home team. However if you go too far with the "doctoring" it can become farcical. Not sure what the answer?

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T11:08:35+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"Swing in England (& NZ?), hard & bouncy in Australia/SA & spin in the sub-continent will make for interesting viewing, instead of converting any of that into flat roads or slow, unhelpful pitches." The Australian pitches the last two summers have, apart from a couple of Tests, been woefully flat and have lost their original character. The corporate desire to try and force Tests to go 5 days is having a really negative influence on the quality of Test cricket we're seeing in Aus.

2016-01-05T10:37:15+00:00

Suneer Chowdhary

Roar Guru


"I actually think that there are several teams who are looking like they’re on course to becoming good, strong teams." Yep, I think so too, a far more competitive top four or five. Also think SA, SL & Pakistan are in a rebuilding phase which could last 12-24 months and accordingly make them competitive over time as well. Hoping to see is more teams win abroad than they have last few years. What I am also hoping for is for home teams to not give up on preparing tracks that suit their style of play and for away sides to adapt accordingly. Swing in England (& NZ?), hard & bouncy in Australia/SA & spin in the sub-continent will make for interesting viewing, instead of converting any of that into flat roads or slow, unhelpful pitches.

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T09:56:59+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hi Suneer, As much as there is no side close to deserving the number 1 tag at the moment, I actually think that there are several teams who are looking like they're on course to becoming good, strong teams. Australia, India, New Zealand and England all have a nucleus of talented young players and could make big strides over the next 2 years. I reckon in 2017-18 we will suddenly have a proper dogfight for the top spot between those four teams, with South Africa the unknown as, so far, they haven't unearthed the quality of young players the other 4 have and are relying on ageing stars. As much as India's away record has been awful in the past few years, they look more and more prepared to be effective in overseas conditions. Their top 6 is now arguably the strongest in Test cricket, so if their paceman can continue to develop and Ashwin translates his form to foreign conditions they will be way better overseas than they have been in recent years.

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T09:46:17+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


TommyH...Australia have just pulled out of the U/19 World Cup in Bangladesh because of the same security concerns that compelled them to cancel the Test tour. What's your spin now?

AUTHOR

2016-01-05T09:44:33+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Yeah it's a pity there is a lot of rain forecast for day 4 also as the rain so far could have actually made the match really intriguing all of a sudden.

2016-01-05T08:51:49+00:00

Ruminate

Roar Guru


The forcast is for heavy rain tomorrow too Nudge, doesn't look promising at all and it's been very bloody wet here today

2016-01-05T06:06:49+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


Do the ICC rankings give more weighting towards away wins? Because they should. Although, thinking it through, home teams would probably just make their pitches even less hospitable for visitors in order to deny them away points.

2016-01-05T05:23:34+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


Certainly not that bloke Morris who had a debut to forget. He was woeful. How many runs did he gift Stokes. Got his innings going with absolute rubbish. Kyle Abbott looks ok though. Their young black bowler shows promise as well.

2016-01-05T05:01:36+00:00

Nudge

Guest


I still think Australia are in with a chance to win this test. Still 192 overs left in the test, and with the covers being on for 2 full days, the Aussies will be confident in taking these last 3 wickets inside the first 30/40 minutes. From there, there's still going to be 85 or so overs left in the day, if the Aussies bat for around 75 of them, they may declare with about 300 on the board and a lead of 30 odd and have a little crack at the windies late day 4, and see if we can grab 1 or 2. That would leave the scores around level by the end of day 4. Day 5 australia would have to roll the remaining windies wickets by tea or a fraction after, leaving an Aussie chase of around 160 to 220 off 30 to 35 overs in the last session. It's been a real bummer this test, but I reckon we could have a really exciting 2 days coming up

2016-01-05T03:36:51+00:00

Tom from Perth

Roar Rookie


Need to give Sayers a Duke ball, pronto.

2016-01-05T03:18:34+00:00

Steele

Guest


How are India even in a position to take the number one spot? They are simply woeful away from home and produce putrid pitches at home. Obviously there's not a lot of quality going around at the moment if that's the case. Bias aside, the Aussie's have a pretty exciting attack when injury free, especially the fast bowling department. I haven't seen the same quality of quicks coming through the ranks in England and S.A.'s teams. Who is the next Jimmy Anderson or Dale Steyn?

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