The Liebke Ratings: Australia vs England second ODI

By Dan Liebke / Expert

Humbled by their defeat to England in the first ODI, Australia headed to Brisbane for the rematch. Alas, consistent rain throughout the day meant that no play was possible and fans on television were forced to settle for a replay of that first match.

Hmmm? Oh. Huh.

Apparently this was a different game altogether, that actually had some subtle differences to the first.

Okay. Here then are the ratings for the second ODI between Australia and England.

Illness
Grade: D
Australia were forced to bring Alex Carey in as wicketkeeper for an ailing Tim Paine. Josh Hazlewood, who’d replaced a resting Pat Cummins, was also ill and was replaced in turn by Jhye Richardson.

Adam Zampa wasn’t ill, but the selectors inexplicably replaced him with Cameron White anyway. I swear, their Marsh successes earlier in the summer have gone completely to the selection panel’s collective head. They think they can get away with any old selectorial nonsense now.

But with a couple of sick players unavailable for this match and multiple reports of illness throughout the Test summer, this is surely the sickliest Australian cricket side since the Scurvy Ashes of 1905.

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300
Grade: C+

Steve Smith won the toss and elected to bat. Like a team of tedious Zack Snyder fanboys, the Nine commentary team responded to this by immediately talking incessantly about 300.

Every other discussion was about whether Australia would make 300, how they should go about getting to 300 and how a score of 300 would merely be par these days, unlike the old days when 300 was just about unbeatable.

It was as if England’s successful Jason Roy-led chase of a 300-plus total in the first match had completely shattered their previous world view. Indeed, Michael Slater got so carried away with praising Roy’s innings that he declared that Roy had ‘changed history’ with the run chase.

Well, no, Slats. Marty McFly changed history. Jason Roy merely made history.

Even Mark Taylor, who has always talked breathlessly about the prospect of teams scoring as many as six, or even seven, runs an over from the final few overs provided they have seven or eight wickets in hand, was suddenly at pains to tell us that 300 might not be enough.

His new-found delight at talking about such mind-boggling run rates was at ‘5-year-old discovers dinosaurs’ levels of enthusiasm. Which would be adorable, if he was not a ridiculously well-paid 53-year-old man apparently only now discovering an obvious trend in a sport he professionally covers.

Joe Root
Grade: A-
Australia’s innings was almost completely identical to their first ODI effort. Aaron Finch made a century that always felt, perhaps unfairly, to be a smidgen too slow. Dave Warner made fewer than expected. Smith underperformed. Mitchell Marsh combined with Finch to recover the innings before both were dismissed just as they looked to accelerate in the final overs.

(AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

One fresh tweak the sides added to the formula was to have Joe Root bowl seven overs and take 2/31, including Smith and Travis Head.

Smith was dismissed LBW to Root and glared angrily at Finch until the opening batsman eventually agreed it was ‘probably worth a review’. It wasn’t, of course, but try to imagine a universe in which any Australian cricketer told Smith he was out and shouldn’t send the decision to the third umpire.

Such a universe simply doesn’t exist.

Root’s success as a spinner did raise the question of how the Ashes might have gone had he taken on that role in the Ashes. Ideally, with Moeen Ali as his captain.

There’s only one way to find out. Let’s replay the whole summer again.

England’s excellence
Grade: B+

In pursuit of Australia’s underwhelming 9/270, Jason Roy was dismissed in the first over by Mitchell Starc. In the process he officially became 2018’s most wildly inconsistent ODI batsman.

Not that it mattered one iota. Alex Hales and Jonny Bairstow put on 117 in no time whatsoever to put England’s chase well ahead of the required run rate. Then Joe Root, Eoin Morgan, Jos Buttler and Chris Wakes all did their part with the bat as England professionally ran down the total.

AFP PHOTO / Saeed KHAN

On the plus side for Australian fans, however, we should always remember that every ODI victory that this excellent England side achieves now just makes their inevitable 2019 World Cup debacle all the funnier.

What a comedically generous side they are.

Team changes
Grade: B-

But Australia’s second large defeat in this series will have them questioning their side and whether they should make changes to fix the flaws in their performances so far.

For example, Australia could definitely do with somebody capable of accelerating the scoring at the end of the innings. Maybe somebody who could contribute some tidy off-spin to help bolster the attack when Zampa is not selected for some reason. If this hypothetical player was excellent in the field and highly experienced that would be useful too.

Alas, no such player exists, so instead I propose that Australia select a team consisting of nothing but Mitches, Marshes, Ashtons and Richardsons.

If you can’t compete with the opposition, then you can at least confuse the bejeezus out of them.

The Crowd Says:

2018-01-20T05:59:16+00:00

ajg

Guest


haha! that was just the tonic that I needed

2018-01-20T05:29:49+00:00

1st&10

Guest


CH 9 commentary is truly pathetic Taylor and Clarke jibbered on about Hawaiian shirts and male swimming attire at length. Sick of the Knick names, commentators should be independent with their assessment and able to be a critic . Other than Chappell, the commentary team are too chummy with current players. Michael Clarke’s inclusion has just made it worse. I suppose it’s the only thing this guy is remotely qualified for post cricket and still the worst commentator since Brayshaw and Warne crapping on about dirty pizzas Compare them to Katich and Rogers

2018-01-20T03:58:05+00:00

Peter

Guest


Excellent appraisal obviously no show required

2018-01-20T03:27:02+00:00

fabian gulino

Roar Rookie


on that performance last night by Australia was a disgrace,and now I feel there is no way back for smith and co to come back from this performance.England will also win on sunday and go 3 nil up.Australia have got batsmen are to scared take risks.

2018-01-20T03:16:26+00:00

JD

Guest


Hilarious!!!

2018-01-20T02:15:50+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


Maxwell 12/10.

2018-01-20T01:35:14+00:00

Dianne Andrews

Guest


Dan, I think your great articles may be in jeopardy. I fear you are being “out parodied” by your very own subjects. Aussie ODI team and selectors are now writing their own jokes. (Don’t really get them though!)

2018-01-20T01:12:08+00:00

Andrew Pelechaty

Roar Rookie


If any team reaches 350 this summer, Mark Taylor's head will probably explode! (P.S. the "300" movies are pretty good; silly and campy as hell, but still good turn-your-brain-off entertainment).

2018-01-20T00:17:31+00:00

Big Daddy

Guest


Dan, I think you should give the commentary team a rating. The rabid Michael Clarke thinks there is only one team playing and the rest have gone down hill since himself and Warne have joined the team. Since Richie departed us (God bless him) they are a complete biased rabble.

AUTHOR

2018-01-20T00:12:17+00:00

Dan Liebke

Expert


I'll try to do better/worse next time.

AUTHOR

2018-01-20T00:11:29+00:00

Dan Liebke

Expert


Thanks Riordan. Very kind.

2018-01-19T23:21:28+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


"His new-found delight at talking about such mind-boggling run rates was at ‘5-year-old discovers dinosaurs’ levels of enthusiasm." So, so true...

2018-01-19T23:19:08+00:00

Riordan Lee

Editor


Another absolute belter, Dan. Great way to start the weekend.

2018-01-19T22:05:02+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


“Well, no, Slats. Marty McFly changed history. Jason Roy merely made history.” Great passage in a great piece. When big Kev, despite making your ears bleed, is making the most sense in commentary, you know there’s an issue.

2018-01-19T21:33:22+00:00

JohnB

Guest


Your comments under 300 let you down. They were far too pointedly and completely and utterly accurate for a Liebke Ratings piece. F.

2018-01-19T18:50:45+00:00

cos1

Guest


300 - could have been a B+ and should have included the term 'paradigm shift.' Mark Taylor and Michael Slater may not be the Doc and Marty McFly respectively, but it did appear that they had jumped from 2008 into a dystopian 2018, where someone made a fortune betting on a team to chase down 300 at the G, and where someone remarkably like Biff Tannen is president of the United States. I think Finchy did the right thing asking for the review for his captain. Don't want to go the way of that certain someone that doesn't exist in Australia at the moment, especially after 3 100's on the trot (to be replaced by Shaun Marsh). I also think the ‘B-' for Changes was unfair. In Cameron White, the selectors had a leg-spinning option in Zampa's replacement who is also a gun fielder and quick between the wickets. Again, it was just that they glanced at the calendar too quickly and thought it was 2008 not 2018.

2018-01-19T18:13:24+00:00

Maggie

Guest


Great article Dan, summed up the match perfectly. What a hoot!

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