Test Mortem: Age just a number for 'Dads Army' Aussies, Cummins the ultimate skeleton key, MCG from worst to best

By Paul Suttor / Expert

It says a lot about Australia’s dominance on home soil that it’s now a surprise when a touring team gives them a run for their money rather than actually winning a Test.

Pakistan got the points in a few sessions in Melbourne and if not for the Mohammad Rizwan dismissal, they were a decent chance of chasing down the victory target before losing their last five wickets for 18.

The last time Australia was legitimately staring down the barrel of a defeat was the last time they actually lost a Test against India at Brisbane nearly three years ago.

Since then it’s been a cavalcade of cakewalks in the five Ashes Tests two years ago, last summer’s South Africa and West Indies (no) contests and the series opener against Pakistan in Perth.

Even though they were made to sweat it out at the MCG right up until what turned out to be the final session on Friday evening, the Aussies didn’t do much wrong.

Pakistan played well and if not for Abdullah Shafique’s basic catching errors at first slip in each innings they could very well have broken their 28-year drought on Australian soil and kept the Benaud-Qadir Trophy series alive heading into next week’s SCG Test.

If you need a refresher on how lopsided Tests have been in Australia in recent times, here is a list of the touring teams that have won a match in the 53 fixtures over the past decade, which we shall read out alphabetically.

India. Four times.
South Africa. Twice.
That is all.

Thirty is the new 20 or Dads Army?

Travis Head celebrated his 30th birthday with a win on Friday which now leaves Marnus Labuschagne as the only player in their 20s in the Australian Test team.

He is the oldest youngest player in the side in Australian Test history.

The selection panel’s reluctance to regenerate this team with fresh blood is not being talked about nearly enough right now but this current crop won’t play forever and if the majority of them exit the Test arena in quick succession, there could be some tough times down the track.

The English team which toured Australia in the mid 1990s was derided as Dad’s Army with all sorts of back-page newspaper mock-ups making fun of their plethora of old-timers like Mike Gatting, Graham Gooch and Alec Stewart.

From the team that lined up in the first Test at Brisbane, there were seven players in their 20s with 30-year-old wicketkeeper Steve Rhodes the only other player in the veteran category.

Mitchell Marsh and Steve Smith. (Photo by Morgan Hancock – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

The current Aussie side is super fit despite having so many seasoned campaigners and the selectors clearly thought Cameron Green would be a mainstay in the team so his drop in form which led to 32-year-old Mitchell Marsh’s recall has thrown a spanner in their plans.

Apart from David Warner, it’s hard to argue any of the other 10 aren’t thoroughly deserving of their spot right now so perhaps a team of experienced players will be the new norm.

Instead of players peaking from 25-30 like they have done in the past, you could mount a case that the next five years could now be when a cricketer can be in their prime with sports science making them fitter for longer.

The likes of Mike Hussey, Brad Haddin and Adam Gilchrist had long Test careers despite waiting a decade-plus in first-class cricket while Marsh and Usman Khawaja are currently flying the flag for players thriving in their 30s after a couple of false starts at a younger age.

Cummins all class

Pat Cummins is in the best form of his career.

The 30-year-old fast bowler is in the sweet spot of still being in his physical prime but also benefiting from years of experience bowling against the planet’s best batters.

His improvement as a one-day bowler, particularly the added weapon of his slower ball bouncer, was an underrated key ingredient in Australia’s World Cup success last month in India.

And with the red ball in hand, his relentless accuracy and ability to move the ball just far enough off the seam to catch the edge is second to none in world cricket.

The delivery that dismissed Babar Azam in the first innings was as close to unplayable as you can get. He produced a similar one later in the innings to get rid of Hasan Ali as part of his 10-wicket haul for the match.

If a gun like Babar couldn’t keep the ball from clattering into the top of his off stump what hope did the poor old tailender have.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

You pretty much know what you’re going to get with Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood but Cummins is the skeleton key of the Australian attack.

He can do the grunt work with long spells or produce shorter bursts of pace when a partnership needs to be broken.

His MCG haul lifted him into Australia’s top 10 Test wicket-takers of all time with 252 in 57 matches.

Because of the five-plus years of Test cricket he missed due to injury early in his career, he won’t be able to reel in Glenn McGrath’s record of 563 for quicks.

But it would be a surprise if he didn’t end up ahead of all the other legends ahead of him – Jason Gillespie (259), Craig McDermott (291), Brett Lee (310), Mitchell Johnson (313), Starc (342 and counting) and the greatest of them all, Dennis Lillee (355).

Pakistan pack a punch

They came into this series with their regular change of captain and without Naseem Shah due to injury and Haris Rauf because he opted for the BBL instead, but Pakistan have acquitted themselves well.

Despite losing both Tests they have won plenty of new admirers for the way they have not backed down against the Australian juggernaut.

Mir Hamza and Aamer Jamal have toiled away for years at domestic level without getting much of a look-in but Pakistan have uncovered a couple of rough diamonds with those two on this tour.

They lack a quality spinner to be able to compete with the big guns of Test cricket and they need another world-class batter to emerge so they’re not as reliant on Babar, who still has plenty of years left in him at 29.

Mohammad Rizwan speaks with umpire Joel Wilson after being controversially given out caught behind off his glove. (Photo by Morgan Hancock – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

Pakistan have surely leapfrogged the Proteas when it comes to the race to be one of the preferred touring teams when India and England aren’t on the schedule.

South Africa were woeful last year and seem to be prioritising Test cricket less and less so Cricket Australia needs the likes of Pakistan, New Zealand and perhaps Sri Lanka to step up. The West Indies certainly won’t be able to give the Aussies a stiff challenge or get too many fans through the turnstiles.

MCG pitch goes from worst to best

Just a few years ago the Melbourne wicket was easily the worst in the country but curator Matt Page and his team deserve plenty of kudos for finally mastering the art of the drop-in pitch.

The surface for the Second Test was superb. There was movement for the seamers, turn for the spinners (Pakistan underbowled Salman Agha Ali) and batters could play shots if they knuckled down.

Even though the Test didn’t last five days that was not due to the wicket but some poor shot selection from both sides.

From a barren featherbed to the ideal Test wicket, the MCG strip is now the best in Australia, a mantle it has not held in living memory.

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-04T20:57:28+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


Starcs' selection ace in the hole is that his size 19's help the Goat.

2024-01-04T20:52:09+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


with a thick under-layer of dead thatch removed CNSW should do the same with their Shield squad...

2024-01-04T20:30:44+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


So you'd pick a bowler with a 40 average ahead of one with a 20 average if the former had a better S/R. Novel...

2024-01-04T06:33:20+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


I’d prefer to go with a bowlers average & strike rate, at a test level. As tipping blood out of your boot means nothing, as far as playing cricket goes. Lillee wasn’t forced to captain the side , as well as having to bowl.

2024-01-04T00:27:20+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Rest of the world side? Pretty much means nothing. Just a side show. I’m not disagreeing that Lillee was a great bowler. Yet how can you say that the metronome accuracy of McGrath. Plus obviously the wickets taken & average. Doesn’t make him the best Australian bowler of all time? That’s where he sits anyway. Plus I’ll add that bowlers of Lillee’s era weren’t over bowled , because of all the one day games , 20/20 games . That bowlers now mostly have to endure.

2024-01-04T00:21:08+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Strike rate & averages . As far bowling is concerned in any form of cricket , they mean everything! So you couldn’t more wrong.

2024-01-03T07:05:57+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Why wouldn’t Australia play India in Queensland or W.A. First ? Then Melbourne or wherever else? As India put pressure on & said where they want to play. So much for your theory. All I’m hearing from you , Is Australia is no different from anyone else. Still based on one pitch for one match & now a second pitch that’s excellent to bat on. Shame on Australia for making a pitch that’s a road to bat on. There should be an investigation into that!!!! When they start getting the groundsman to water particular areas of pitches , so as to particularly adversely affect an opposition’s batting line up , for example. Then you might have something. Right now, you’ve got your a personal opinion, with nothing to back it up.

2024-01-02T01:09:31+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Thanks Laurence. Espncricinfo’s Statsguru can bring up a lot of stuff quite quickly once you get the hang of it.

2024-01-01T09:23:32+00:00

All day Roseville all day

Roar Guru


Cheers Laurence, The 2020 lockdown and almost 9 months of WFH was the catalyst for an explosion in the number of this type of article !

2024-01-01T09:08:05+00:00

Laurie

Roar Rookie


Great research DaveJ. I could spend hours on this type of thing.

2024-01-01T09:06:38+00:00

Laurie

Roar Rookie


Sorry All day Roseville, I should have known that the pros had already covered this! Great article and great research too. :thumbup:

2024-01-01T08:28:48+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


There's still the vagaries of temperature to deal with so a lot of experience can be called for.

2024-01-01T05:32:37+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


And an interesting comment by Nihil Chaudhury, a BBL player who moved to Brisbane from India in 2020. “"I didn't have to change my technique on these fast and bouncy wickets because domestic cricket in India is often played on those wickets. They are not those sharp turning pitches you see in Test matches.” Hmmm..

2024-01-01T03:44:29+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Well, there’s certainly evidence to back up that suspicion! https://www.theroar.com.au/2023/03/11/data-proves-that-indian-pitches-have-clearly-deteriorated-whether-they-are-doctored-or-not/

2024-01-01T02:17:17+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Thanks Rosie. You've got me intrigued. Was that underlayer of dead thatch put there deliberately? If so, what would it bring to preparing decent pitches? If not, how did it get there and why? I understood the SCG wicket was simply Bulli soil and a grass seed mix, but obviously that's wrong.

2024-01-01T02:16:10+00:00

All day Roseville all day

Roar Guru


They wouldn't even play Shires or Fifth Grade on it. Although in a grand final, the lower-placed team would of course insist that it was perfectly fine. In fact they wouldn't even turn up at the ground, as the local council would have closed it the day prior.

2024-01-01T02:09:57+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Aaah, the glory days of sticky wickets. I wonder if they'd play these days if a wicket like that was prepared? Probably not, but it would be fun to see Hazlewood and the GOAT opening the batting!

2024-01-01T02:08:06+00:00

All day Roseville all day

Roar Guru


Today's SMH is reporting that the entire centre-square was relaid after last season, with a thick under-layer of dead thatch removed.

2024-01-01T02:05:49+00:00

All day Roseville all day

Roar Guru


The SCG's groundsman has 3 months to get Pitch 5 ready, and in theory a groundsman with a drop-in square has 12 months. But it's still an art, not a science !

2024-01-01T02:03:29+00:00

All day Roseville all day

Roar Guru


But not as bad as in 1928/29, 1936/37, 1946/47 amd 1950/51...

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