After the Sri Lankan spankin' where to for Australia?

By Spencer Liapakis / Roar Rookie

Having comprehensively losing the Warne-Muralidaran Trophy to Sri Lanka, Australia might seem in the dumps, but a positive approach is required if the team is to bounce back.

Despite losing within three days at Galle, there are many ways to go about mounting a consolation victory in the third Test.

There’s also the matter of building up for a massive Australian summer, that will feature South Africa and the impressive Pakistan, who played some exciting and classy cricket in losing to England.

When fans hear of losses on the subcontinent, Australians want to blame the batsmen for an inability to play spin. While it is clear that the Aussies have struggled against Sri Lanka’s tweak attack, the blame cannot be solely placed on them.

Credit must be given to Rangana Herath, Lakshan Sandakan and Dilruwan Perera for bowling as well as their captain could have asked for – rarely were they loose, and the bowling figures reflect that.

However, as international cricketers, the Australians cannot continue to get bogged down by subcontinental spinners who thrive in their home conditions.

Darren Lehmann has recently called for pitch variation for Shield games in order to prepare batsmen better for potential wickets overseas. On paper, this seems ideal, but the condition of the wicket is not the only reason that cricket on the subcontinent is difficult for visiting teams. Oppressive heat and humidity can play its tricks, and the familiarity of this weather gives the home team an upper hand.

Queensland is the only place where we can simulate these conditions, and those early seeds have been planted. The special spin-friendly wickets at the National Performance Centre have been beneficial, with Peter Nevill practicing his wicketkeeping against the Aussie spinners in the offseason. However, the way forward should be a first-class ground in Queensland tailored for spin, in order to give match practice as part of their Shield season.

Preparing the next generation to play fluently in all conditions is obviously a goal for Cricket Australia, and again the foundations are being laid, with Travis Head joining the team ahead of the third Test. While it is unlikely he will play, allowing him to learn to play in foreign conditions is important. Head is among a number of obvious candidates to carry Australia’s batting order in the near future, and others should continue to go on tour with the national squad to experience foreign conditions from early on in their career.

The root of the issue is not entirely in the battin,g however. While Australia’s seamers impressed with their utilisation of reverse swing, the comparison of Australia and Sri Lanka’s spinners leaves a lot to be desired.

In supposedly favourable conditions, the Aussie spinners took 14 wickets while leaking more than four runs an over. This lack of discipline proved fatal, as Sri Lanka constantly took to Nathan Lyon and company.

Smart batting was obviously a large factor, Australian spinners must learn to adapt to the choice of line. On the flat pitches at home, it is common to adopt a straight, defensive off-stump line, simply trying to stem the flow. In Sri Lanka, with the ball spinning in to a predominantly right-handed line-up, Lyon needed to throw it a little wider to introduce uncertainty – luckily, he definitely has the skills to employ this in the future. After all, you can’t get 200 wickets without doing something right.

Steve O’Keefe was promising before he injured his hamstring, while Jon Holland was far too inconsistent on debut, and failed to build pressure. The Sri Lankan trio exhibited a near-perfect display of consistency and accuracy, letting natural variation do the rest.

With the number one Test ranking now within the grasp of England, India and Pakistan, the Aussies need to make amends for their underwhelming performances in Colombo and Galle.

Following this, the future must be the focus.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-11T15:59:32+00:00

Tanmoy Kar

Guest


The reasons for Australia's demolition (going 0-2 down by a 7th.Rank side) are i) Their all batsmen played spin very poorly, had even one or two batsmen faced the spin properly the result could had been different. ii) Over dependence on Lyon, Sri Lanka's all spinners are good still they played four of them. iii) A mistake, not included Adam Zampa in the squad.

2016-08-10T02:07:48+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


@Sam. You posted pretty much what I wanted to post. I will add that if we are to be competitive on the sub continent our best promising players have to learn to play spin in their early teens not on the job in their 20s as Ian Chappell says. CA has plans to put their Aussie designed baked clay decks which are believed to replicate sub cont. conditions, in communities thruout the country. This to me is a positive step in our constant battle to win in India.

2016-08-10T00:37:39+00:00

Sam

Guest


I think for the Sheffield Shield each state should have a unique pitch that emulates an overseas destination. i.e. South Australia and maybe Northern Territory, North QLD develop a ‘raging turner’ that matches Sub-Continent conditions. Victoria and Tasmania to have green tops to match English conditions (could also introduce Duke balls for these games). Brisbane, Western Australia to have fast wickets similarly to what Australia and South Africa are known for. This way all state players (batters and bowlers) are tested on a range of different pitches throughout the season. I think it would help create more well-rounded players and help identify players that have strengths in particular conditions. Not saying these changes have to made at each states premier oval (GABBA, SCG, Adelaide Oval) but could be done at the smaller grounds (Alan Border Field in QLD, North Sydney Oval in NSW or regional areas) which is not uncommon for Sheffield Shield games anyway.

2016-08-09T23:02:55+00:00

Nick

Roar Pro


The Australian Cricket team will always be plagued by it's mediocrity in the subcontinent. To bring in Jon Holland who at the start of last year wasn't even Victoria's first choice spinner is utterly ridiculous. Australia do not understand the fundamentals of playing quality spin bowling. In Australia, we play on pitches that cater to bounce and pace and therefore we score 600 no matter the opposition. Our pitch caters and coaches need to cop the brunt of the blame. Will we ever see Australia successful on the sub-continent? No, not until we find a way to combat spin bowling and bring in spinners that suit those conditions

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