Australia have crumbled in the face of a brilliant new-ball burst from West Indies veteran Kemar Roach, to throw their hopes of a fifth consecutive Test win this summer into jeopardy.
After a fighting half-century from debutant Kevin Sinclair saw the Windies post a competitive first-innings 311, the hosts’ response could scarcely have started worse, staggering to lunch at 4/24 and with the opening quick on a hat-trick.
Roach began the rout by pinning Steve Smith plumb in front for 6 in the first over, an on-field not out call quickly overturned.
At the other end, Alzarri Joseph made it two big scalps in two overs when Marnus Labuschagne was brilliantly caught by Sinclair at fourth slip for 3.
Having been at the centre of the Australian selection controversy following Cameron Bancroft’s opener snub, Cameron Green did his spot in the side at number four no favours, managing just 8 before chipping a drive to Windies captain Kraigg Brathwaite at short cover for Roach’s second.
Already having enjoyed a session to remember with bat and ball, there would be one last victory for the tourists to end the session, Travis Head strangling the veteran quick down the leg side for a first-ball duck.
It was Smith’s dismissal, however, that drew the most ire from Fox Cricket‘s commentary stable, with the makeshift opener having missed his trademark flick across his pads having moved a long way back and across.
“He’s all over the place with that technique – that should not get you out as an opening batter,” former England captain Michael Vaughan said.
“The ball nips back, but you just look at his head position here – it’s going over to the offside.
“He gets LBW because of that movement… just look at that head position, that’s a long way outside the line of the off stump.”
“That premeditated movement before the ball’s bowled is way too far to the off side,” former Australian great Mark Waugh added.
“All his weight is falling that side. So if you get the ball to nip back, you can’t access the ball with your bat, and your footwork’s all over the shop because your weight’s going too far to the off side.
“He’s just getting into a position where he just can’t adjust to the line of the ball.”
For Vaughan, the dismissal, as well as another early downfall in the first innings in Adelaide, should throw doubt into Smith’s capability to succeed as an opener.
“Opening the batting against fresh bowlers, a hard pink ball on this occasion, a hard red ball at the Adelaide Oval – it just nips that little bit quicker,” he said.
“If you’re going to hang right back, which he does, and particularly at the minute when his head’s outside the line of off stump, it [the ball] doesn’t actually have to do a great deal.
“My concern for Steve is he stuck his hand up and said ‘I’m going to go from four to two’, and now twice – he got a little red-inker in the second innings at the Adelaide Oval – he’s now got two differing dismissals. He’s been snuck off from a wide delivery, and he now got LBW.
“Next innings, he’s going to be very precarious about what does he do with his movements at the crease.”
Smith has made just 29 runs at 14.5 in three innings opening the batting at Test level this summer.
An Australia Day protest outside the Gabba has resulted in Cricket Australia putting the venue on lockdown on Friday afternoon, leaving many fans stranded outside waiting to enter.
According to Fox Sports, a pair of protesters were allowed into the ground ahead of play on Day 2 as an Invasion Day rally went on outside Gate 2, resulting in a brief delay of five to ten minutes where patrons were not allowed to enter the venue.
Among the signs held by the protesters was one reading ‘No Justice, No Sport’, with a heavy police presence on hand near the ground.
Once play began, the rally gradually dispersed; however, during the first over of the day, another protester invaded the field of play holding an Aboriginal flag, lying down in the outfield before being apprehended by security.
The incident comes after Cricket Australia came under fire for their decision to not acknowledge ‘Australia Day’ during Friday’s play, while captain Pat Cummins called for the country to ‘choose a better date’ for the national holiday.
“We should have an Australia Day, but we can probably find a more appropriate day to celebrate it,” Cummins said earlier in the week.
“Once you start realising [the significance of] January 26 and why it is chosen, Australia Day is meant to be a celebration of everything Australia and our history.
“We could choose a better date.”
A record West Indies partnership has the tourists believing after an even day one at the Gabba, but Australian quick Mitchell Starc was having flashbacks to a day-night Test run-fest.
The second Test is poised nicely thanks to a surprise fightback from the hosts, who will resume on Friday at 8-266 after falling to 5-64 following their decision to bat first on Thursday.
Starc said the pace at which the pink ball became soft on the hard Gabba surface had triggered memories of the venue’s maiden day-night Test against Pakistan in December 2016.
He took seven wickets in that Test, including four in the fourth innings as Pakistan batted for 145 overs and fell 40 short in their chase of 490.
Their total of 450 was the third-biggest of all-time by any team and came after they’d mustered just 142 in the first innings.
“The ball is what it is; I think it comes down to the wicket, which I think Adelaide has got right,” he said of the South Australian venue that’s hosted day-night Tests most years since 2015.
The Gabba ground staff shaved the last remnants of green grass from the square ahead of play on Thursday, keen to avoid a repeat of last summer’s two-day Test against South Africa that left the pitch with a “below average” rating from the ICC.
“We know the ball goes soft at certain stages depending on the wicket,” Starc said.
“I think it’s pretty similar to the game where we played Pakistan where the pink ball went soft very early.
“There wasn’t much in it for the bowlers. It feels like a similar wicket where it is too firm for the pink ball. I think it would be a fantastic red-ball wicket, but probably too firm for the pink ball.”
Windies keeper Joshua Da Silva has other ideas.
The pink ball does funny stuff,” he said. “It may not have not done much today but it does funny stuff at times. You never know what could happen.”
The writing was on the wall after a West Indies squad lacking many of their biggest names was beaten by 10 wickets before lunch on day three of the Adelaide series opener.
But wicketkeeper Josh Da Silva (79) and No.5 Kavem Hodge (71), in his second Test, put on 149 to turn the match into a contest.
“We showed we are here to fight,” Da Silva said of the Australian summer’s longest partnership in terms of balls faced.
“We want to show people that the West Indies are still here and we deserve to be here.”
They bowled the hosts out for 283 in Adelaide earlier this month and Da Silva believes they now have a total to put pressure on an Australian top-four without an individual century-maker among them this summer.
“Definitely. We have runs on the board and having them in the field for the whole day is tiring,” he said.
“To keep them out there was nice and to have them come back tomorrow and bowl again and have to strap on their boots is really solid for us.”
13th Man
Roar Rookie
He’s the best number 4 in Australia, that’s where he should bat. Green did ok today, a few others let themselves down. Still not convinced this is the best top 6 we have.
Blink
Roar Rookie
What rubbish. Only you expected him to dominate. If you take a quick look you may let everyone know who is Australias best run scoring bat in the second innings todate. Don't bother. Its one S Smith. Second best C Green. A bit limited aren't you!
Blink
Roar Rookie
It's strange though because they show Smith batting in the nets before the start of play and he moves across slightly to the off. In the game he's moving way outside off. Many top batsman walk across their stumps at the end of their careers. Lara, Lehmann, Katich spring to mind immediately. Play everything leg. But Smith is still hitting to the offside. I reckon he needs to watch himself on video.
Blink
Roar Rookie
Actually they aren't. The oldies have cricket carnivals, or did, every year, across Australia & NZ and lots of old extest cricketers take part. And they come back to club cricket standard as participants know. Withering eyesight doesn't help. They are still better but that is because they are more competitive.
Blink
Roar Rookie
He lacks intellect, which would explain his bogan comments. But loves himself :)
Red Rob
Roar Rookie
I could easily live without it. Might Airbnb my house and split for a few well-paid weeks.
Blink
Roar Rookie
Yup. The plan is way over the top for an Olympics whereby the locals love their AFL and cricket. I think the plan will be modified. Why didn't any other country want the Olympics?
BigGordon
Roar Rookie
Quite amazing just how competitive some of the older players are. Even more amazing their skill levels, even though they're well past their prime. I played A grade sub districts as a 15 year old and one of our guys was an ex-Shield batsman, who was a ring-in. He too must have been in his 50's and I spent three hours watching this guy bat. He batted out of his crease to spinners, made a hundred and never once played a false shot. Skill levels I could not hope to get close to, but I had a lot of fun trying.
Gamechanger
Roar Rookie
I got some practical advice from Neil Harvey. True story. Bowling as a 12 yr old like Lillee ( as a 12 yr old thinks he does) to him and he would have been about 50 at the time. I thought he wouldn’t take it too seriously. He launched into this massive off drive that sped so fast along the ground I could scarcely believe it. In that arc. Middled it. I thought if that is what you’re doing at 50, your prime must have been something to behold.
Panthers
Roar Rookie
I wasn’t replying to you. I just placed an opinion.
Jez North
Roar Rookie
I’ve never had a problem with changing the date either but no one has even proposed a new/more appropriate date. I don’t suppose that registered in my earlier post, such was your haste to sermonise.
BigGordon
Roar Rookie
I think Smith can be open minded but some players get in a funk and simply can't clear their minds enough to accept advice (been there, done that and it's not a fun place to be. They're often very confused, especially if they're getting well-meaning but conflicting instruction, so hopefully Smith is listening to one person who knows how Smith can resolve the problem.
Ben Pobjie
Expert
North Korea is nice all times of year. It is paradise. Bless Dear Leader for making the sun shine 12 months.
Ben Pobjie
Expert
Well a) is obviously a big imponderable from the outside, but you’d hope he’s still open-minded enough at this stage of his career. He’s made changes before. As for b) I think he’s definitely able - but it does come down to whether that’s the central problem or not. The other thing is, for all the talk of technique as an opener, this kind of flaw is something that’ll get you no matter where you bat. It’s not like playing that way is fine and dandy for a number four bat either.
Panthers
Roar Rookie
Not a lot of people outside of North Korea could know that? :laughing:
Panthers
Roar Rookie
I’ve never had a problem with changing the date of Australia Day. Don’t know why anyone else would? I’d even go as far as to ask our indigenous peoples representatives to propose a date for an all inclusive Australia Day. What’s the problem?
Jez North
Roar Rookie
That’s very naive to assume all of the protestors were simply there for a change of holiday. You need to watch the news. Large crowds with ‘Give our Land Back’ banners marching with large numbers of ‘Free Palestine’ supporters.
BigGordon
Roar Rookie
I got exactly the same advice from Bobby Simpson
BigGordon
Roar Rookie
That supposes Smith is a) willing to accept he has a technical issue and b) is able to fix this. Both are very hard to do when you're not in good form
mrl
Roar Rookie
Brilliant….that was my point!!