Where to now for Aussies as 4-0 drubbing looms large: How they can avoid 'sweep' to make world Test final

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Australia are in disarray after their Delhi drubbing and they now face the very real prospect of again being knocked out of the World Test Championship final. 

They have nearly more than a week to regroup before the next Border-Gavaskar Trophy match at Indore (it was only supposed to be a seven-day break but three-day Tests have been the norm this series). 

After missing out on the original World Test Championship final by the barest of margins due to a poor over rate, they are now in danger of missing June’s decider in England despite sitting pretty at the top of the standings for the majority of the past two years. 

If they lose the next two Tests, they could again miss the boat if Sri Lanka win both matches in New Zealand next month.

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Despite upsetting India in the first final, the Black Caps have been struggling of late and have won just two, lost seven and drawn three matches since lifting the inaugural trophy.

Pat Cummins leads his team off the ground after they were defeated by India on day three of the Second Test at Delhi. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

The Kiwis are too nice to do it deliberately but they’d allow themselves a wry smile if they were to lose 2-0 and it inflicted pain on their trans-Tasman nemesis. 

Australia can seal their place in the decider by drawing or actually winning either of the next two Tests in India.

Considering both of the first two Tests were over before the tea break on day three, playing for a draw looks out of the equation even if they wanted to give it a try.

To have any chance of avoiding a whitewash, they need to sort out these key problem areas.

Tactics

The sweep science: When in Rome do as the Romans do so when in India, bat like their masters of the turning ball. (Although with the next match being in Indore that doesn’t mean you should play indoor cricket – that works better when you say it aloud rather than as the written word.)

India’s batters don’t sweep at every opportunity so why have the Australians decided that’s the tactic that will work for them.

Matthew Hayden. (Photo by Quinn Rooney – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

Matthew Hayden used the sweep to great effect in 2001 as he bludgeoned 549 runs at 109.8 with 119 in the first Test, a 97 in the second and a magnificent 203 in the series finale. He was apparently seen with a broom on the Delhi pitch mocking the current team while filming an upcoming segment for host broadcaster Star Sports – that will be interesting viewing, to say the least.

But just because the sweep tactic worked for the tall Queensland opener after he spent months preparing specifically for it, doesn’t mean it will work for every Australian batter. 

India’s batters mainly come forward to spin but whether they’re moving onto the front or back foot, they are decisive. Their hands follow their feet. With the Australians there does not appear to be the same synchronicity of limbs. 

Peter Handscomb, Marnus Labuschagne, Usman Khawaja and Steve Smith have fleetingly looked comfortable with their footwork to the spinners but have too often brought themselves undone with injudicious shots.

“There were some people who went clearly away from the game plan that made them successful over a period of time and that’s for us to own as a collective,” coach Andrew McDonald said in his Monday press conference.

“We’ve got to be better than that, that’s the bottom line, we’ve got to own it and we are not here to shy away from the fact that wasn’t good enough.”

Bowl at the stumps: They would have and definitely should have been taught this in the under 10s. It sounds simplistic but it applies in India more than anywhere else.

LBW and bowled dismissals for India this series: Australian batters were out 13 times in Nagpur and 12 in Delhi to these two dismissals. India: Six in the series opener and six in the second Test.

Again, there’s much more to getting wickets in India than aiming at the pegs but the natural variation which can manifest itself in the kind of skidding delivery which claimed Rohit Sharma in Delhi is only useful if it’s on target.

With Pat Cummins calling correctly both times, Australia have had the luxury of bowling second in each Test but they have failed to take advantage either time – they didn’t even get to bowl last in the first match. 

Ravichandran Ashwin celebrates taking the wicket of Steve Smith. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Selections

No Warner, no matter what: With scans revealing a small fracture on his elbow on top of the failed concussion test which ruled him out mid-match in Delhi, the veteran opener is unlikely to be available for the third match.

That aside, his poor returns of 1, 10 and 15 in his first three trips to the crease, following on from subpar tours to India in 2013 and ‘17 add up to someone who cannot be trusted to produce in these conditions.

Matt Renshaw is the only other specialist opener in the squad but his only four runs from three innings have been from three edged deliveries and a single to mid-on so Travis Head, after his encouraging 43 at nearly a run a ball in the second innings in Delhi, should walk out to bat with Usman Khawaja to start the Australian innings at Indore. 

“He’s (Warner) still sore at the moment. If Dave’s unavailable it would make perfect sense,” McDonald said on Head remaining at opener. “We’re in no rush to make any decisions at this point in time around Davey. 

“It will be basically how sore and how functional it (the elbow) is as to what decision we make with him and then the length of the injury. There’s some talk the length of injury could be anywhere between a week-plus depending how that settles down.”

Green a no-brainer but is Starc? 

All-rounder Cameron Green and Mitchell Starc were both considered touch and go for Delhi so they should be fully recovered from their respective finger injuries next Wednesday. 

Green replaces Renshaw in the middle order while if Starc is brought back in, Matt Kuhnemann would get the chop after taking two wickets and not getting smashed on debut but lacking penetration with his left-arm spinners. 

Cummins didn’t even bother bowling himself in the second innings at Delhi, using Head’s part-time offies as the fourth option after the three frontline spinners. 

If Green joins Cummins at Indore, do the Australians also need Starc’s left-arm pace as well?

David Warner walks off after he was dismissed by Mohammed Shami. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Nathan Lyon and Todd Murphy nearly racked up 50 overs each in Nagpur and they should have Head as a third tweaker for game three so leaving Starc out opens the door for another batter.

Green could then come in at No.7, Alex Carey at eight followed by Cummins, Lyon and Murphy but it would also mean a recall for Renshaw or Warner as there are no other options in the squad.

Glenn Maxwell made his return from his broken leg in club cricket last weekend but it’s highly unlikely they’d be flying him over Kuhnemann style with very little cricket under his belt, let alone of the long-form variety.

If Warner is available, it looks like the selectors will have a choice of going with a sixth specialist batter and giving him or Renshaw another chance despite wretched form or selecting Starc and zagging with a pace-heavy attack while India zigs with spin.

Having options is over-rated: The truly great teams have a set XI and only change it in the case of injuries or retirements. 

The Australians are yet to announce whether Mitchell Swepson will return to the tour after returning home for the birth of his first child while it appears Ashton Agar is fulfilling a role of glorified net bowler/specialist substitute fielder. 

If the selectors were that put off by Agar’s average display in the SCG Test last month, they should have bitten the bullet and not picked him altogether. 

Another left-armer, NSW seamer Mike Whitney took 7-89 against the mighty West Indies in 1989 at Adelaide in the last match before the Ashes touring party was announced.

The selectors didn’t think he had the bowling style that would work in England so they recalled Terry Alderman and Geoff Lawson instead. 

It was a bitter pill to swallow for Whitney but in hindsight it was the right call as Alderman (41 wickets) and Lawson (29) cut a swathe through the English batters. 

The fact that the current brains trust flew Kuhnemann in to make his debut ahead of Agar proves that they made a blunder from the get-go.

An astute reader of The Roar made a comment the other day that variety wasn’t necessary for those Windies line-ups that Whitney had his day out against.

When they played in the subcontinent during their heyday in the 1980s they’d bring off-spinner Roger Harper into the attack instead of one of their four fearsome quicks and Viv Richards or Carl Hooper would step up with some off-spinners. 

They were that great that they didn’t lose a series anywhere, whether the wickets were turning in India, bouncing in Australia or seaming in England from 1980-95. 

Steve Waugh’s side was on a similar path in the 1990s with a world record hot streak of 16 Test wins in a row. If it was spinning, they’d bring in Stuart MacGill or Colin Miller to join Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie, otherwise complete their attack with Brett Lee, Damien Fleming or Andy Bichel. 

Not a bad line-up. They didn’t need to tinker with the batting too much either. 

It was all going swimmingly until 2001 … when they arrived in India. 

The Crowd Says:

2023-02-24T21:01:41+00:00

Baggygreen2.1

Roar Rookie


im not sure how people are against elite mateship and elite honesty!? these are good things current mantra seems to be ‘its about failing the right way’

2023-02-24T08:39:56+00:00

VSSRAO

Roar Rookie


Draw is almost out of contention unless the Australian batsmen create miracles that I don't think would happen!

2023-02-22T15:23:14+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


so the ipl and bbl really run cricket now for Australia in reality m test cricket is subjugated to where it can fit in and what players will sacrifice financially for it

2023-02-22T02:48:45+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


can't delay by a month as it bumps into the IPL.

2023-02-22T01:06:47+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He has Roccicchioli, a better bowler than Murphy. Agar is just not being allowed to play Shield cricket because he is being selected in Oz squads but never in Oz teams. That is unchanged regardless of which state he plays for. A case in point; he is arguably the world's best T20 spinner but he was kept from the BBL final because CA wanted him at a spinner's camp (that was truncated by rain). What was the point of that camp if they weren't going to play him? (Is Vettori any use?) He is constantly denied games of cricket by administration, so much so, that when people want to argue against Agar's selection, they are forced to stumble for a test record of 5 tests, two of which were over 10 years ago.

2023-02-22T00:54:14+00:00

Rob

Guest


Seriously thou. McGill did and just like Johnson moved from QLD to the West. Many people want to get their best career opportunities and sometimes moving is required. Perhaps Agar isn’t a chance of playing FC cricket if he goes there? Maybe he’s got limited competition in WA.

2023-02-22T00:51:51+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Fair call

2023-02-22T00:44:05+00:00

Rob

Guest


Lyon has always been very good at getting turn and bounce. For his exceptional turn and bounce is very consistent also. The frustration for me is Lyon’s lack of a cricket instincts ( smarts ). He has a very limited feel or situational awareness. Every batsman has different weakness or strengths. Pitch conditions change. Lyon can’t adapt to changing his speed, length or lines. Bowling to Rohit or Kohli is a complete different situation than Pugara and Patel but you’ll see Lyon trying the same plan? IMO.

2023-02-21T23:16:36+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I thought you were typing with them already on your fingers.

2023-02-21T22:08:04+00:00

Rob

Guest


Ben, I’m not denying the Indian players have a high level of skill and are accustomed to the conditions on home turf better. That said the Australian team is not devoid of talent and the ability to put bat on ball or bowl with control. What I’m seeing is the mentality of the players is not what it should be? We could put a lot down to preparation but right now I’m personally believing attitude and application is playing a significant part in their performance. That’s destroying their confidence in their team mates and that in turn affects their own discipline and mentality. Playing positively is not about hitting boundaries. Playing aggressively is not what Test cricket looks like. What I witnessed from Australia in the second innings and even over both Tests was akin to the cattle dog call in Origin. They forgot about playing the game and lost focus on each individual moment in the game being part of the result. They played like Gallen and Jarred Hayne whilst India played like Cameron Smith and Cooper Cronk picking their moments based on doing the little 1 % skill better for longer. Playing for your team is not your 10 swinging for a boundaries with a set batsman at the other end.

2023-02-21T21:16:48+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


Next time, I might try finger puppets.

2023-02-21T16:33:48+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Hey, guys, wearer a broad church, to quote 2,743rd favourite politician

2023-02-21T16:16:43+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Ringo would be happy

2023-02-21T15:14:57+00:00

Nobody likes a smarta*s

Roar Rookie


Green at 6 is the best option. We have to bowl them out for a low score so 4 specialist bowlers give us a better chance of that. The only change should be Green in and Renshaw out. But I would open with Labuschagne and have Handscomb at 3. I see that Agar was among the wickets in the Shield game. Now there is something you don’t hear every day

2023-02-21T13:50:04+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I don't. Rowdy and I get each other. He was having a playful dig at the test match experience Agar has been denied.

2023-02-21T13:47:32+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


An achiever would help. Voges? Buchanan's was lucky at 2 levels; his team carried him and there was no social media.

2023-02-21T13:45:21+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The bowling let us down at the Patel/Jadeja partnership. We had a bowler best equipped to deal with that; he wasn't called upon.

2023-02-21T13:43:22+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Not at all.

2023-02-21T13:21:14+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Two home series to India

2023-02-21T13:20:53+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Just because you believe Agar is better doesn’t mean Kuhnemann is dreadful. He did a serviceable job. No more, no less. He was bowled too much because Murphy got sore and I guess they thought the spinning both ways thing was the way to go. They should have played Agar, but you don’t have to decide Kuhnemann is hopeless to get to that conclusion

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