Every Aussie rated from second Test and series vs West Indies: Did Smith the opener get vindicated even in defeat?

By Tim Miller / Editor

For the first time in three years – and the first time against the West Indies since 1997 – Australia have been beaten in their own backyard.

The remarkable thing? It’s a safe bet that as Shamar Joseph knocked out Josh Hazlewood’s off stump to complete a remarkable eight-run victory for the tourists and sparking scenes of utter jubilation at the Gabba, many of us Aussies were only too happy to concede the points to a band of unsung heroes who’d pulled off something truly special.

But the issues that have bubbled beneath the surface for Australia all summer are now well and truly in the spotlight. What is going on with Marnus Labuschagne? Is the Travis Head party over? And is opening with Steve Smith and putting Cameron Green at number four really the long-term solution for a misfiring top order?

Some of those questions have already been answered; others, well, we’ll have to wait for two Tests against New Zealand in a month’s time to know more.

Here are The Roar’s player ratings for the second Test – and the full Frank Worrell Trophy.

Usman Khawaja

Second Test: 7

Series: 6

The glue of Australia’s first innings, Khawaja’s well-compiled 75 played a big role in getting the hosts close to the Windies’ total despite precious little help from the rest of the top order – indeed, the other members of the top five mustered 17 between them.

His strike rate took a significant upturn after a relatively sluggish summer to that point, but while he can’t be faulted, it’s clear opposition sides don’t fear him anywhere near as much as they used to David Warner: he’s made a significant contribution of 40 or more in every first innings this summer, but only in Perth have Australia racked up a score of note.

Steve Smith

Second Test: 8.5

Series: 6.5

The first Australian since David Warner in 2011 to carry his bat, it will be little comfort to Smith that he wasn’t able to single-handedly drag his team over the line like he has countless times in the past.

After two failures to begin life as an opener, the champion looked determined to fix some technical deficiencies in Australia’s run chase, with the result a chanceless 91 that brought his team to within reach of victory.

It at least means he’ll stay at the top of the order for the upcoming New Zealand series, and it would be a surprise to see him lose the job for the 2024/25 Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

Marnus Labuschagne

Second Test: 0.5

Series: 1

For much of this summer, Labuschagne’s returns had only been miniscule by his own lofty standards: now, though, it’s clear he’s facing a prolonged form slump that has put his spot in the team in sudden jeopardy.

Managing just 3 and 5 and getting out in identical fashion – lazily wafting outside off to be spectacularly caught at slip by a diving Kevin Sinclair – makes the number three the Australian most culpable for the loss.

With India and England coming over the next two summers, Labuschagne had better find his form quickly, or a team that has relied on his runs for four and a half years now will be in serious strife.

Cameron Green

Second Test: 5.5

Series: 4.5

Having looked well and truly out of his depth in the first innings at the Gabba, as well as in his only knock in Adelaide, Green’s painstaking 42 in the run chase was a positive step in the right direction for the man anointed as Australian cricket’s next big thing.

After starting his innings nervously under lights on Day 3, the all-rounder came out with renewed purpose on Sunday to put on 71 runs with Smith, and it was only once he was dismissed to a sharply nipping Shamar Joseph ball that Australia began to crumble.

Showed he remains a golden arm with the ball by removing a set Kraigg Brathwaite in the second innings, with his biggest blemish a bad dropped catch in the gully which took everyone by surprise.

Travis Head

Second Test: 1

Series: 6

The only reason Head even gets a 1 here is because of the excellence of his short leg run out in the Windies’ second innings, which seemed to light a fire beneath Australia at a crucial stage.

But having become the third Australian to make a Test king pair, alongside Adam Gilchrist and Ryan Harris, Head literally couldn’t have had a worse time with the bat (at least if he’d made a diamond duck, he could blame a teammate for running him out).

Aside from his spectacular Adelaide century, this has been a rough old summer for the World Cup hero: can he turn it around ahead of a supremely tough next 24 months?

Mitchell Marsh

Second Test: 2.5

Series: 2

The key man with the bat in every Test against Pakistan, the all-rounder couldn’t have anywhere near the same impact against the West Indies.

A counterattacking first-innings 21 off just 20 balls wasn’t long enough to have any bearing on an Australian win, while he copped a beauty from Joseph in the second dig for 10.

Has seldom bowled since Green’s return to the line-up, a surprise given how effective he was as a fifth bowling option to start the summer.

Alex Carey

Second Test: 7

Series: 6.5

Depending on your opinion of Carey’s spot in the Test team, you’ll likely be focusing more on the wicketkeeper’s breathtaking 49-ball 65 in the first innings that rescued Australia from real trouble, or his second-innings 2 before being castled by Joseph that confirmed the hosts were in the muck.

65 from a wicketkeeper, though, is invaluable, so despite his Day 4 failure it would be impossible to cold Carey culpable for the last-day collapse.

Nearly dropped the sitter to end all sitters with the gloves, which would have cost him a mark had he shelled it.

Mitchell Starc

Second Test: 7.5

Series: 7

The pick of the quicks on Day 1 with four wickets in the Windies’ top six, Starc’s love affair with the pink ball well and truly continued at the Gabba.

Added another scalp in the second innings to finish with five for the match, but probably bowled better than that, especially early in the match when Australia were on top.

As for his batting, his last-day 21 off just 14 balls was either recklessly irresponsible or a vital counterattack with the Windies surging. Or both. It might have been both.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Pat Cummins (c)

Second Test: 6

Series: 7.5

Trust Pat Cummins to take one wicket all Test and still be one of Australia’s key contributors – this time, with the bat.

Coming in with his team in strife at 7/161 and blasting a rapid fire 64 – his highest Test score and first half-century in the format since 2018 – the skipper’s misstep might have been in declaring on himself late on Day 2, which both cost him a chance at a ton and his team runs which would prove quite handy.

But any critics of his captaincy should also take a back seat – excellently marshalling his troops throughout the match save for some noted passivity during the 149-run stand on Day 1 between Joshua Da Silva and Kavem Hodge, it wasn’t his fault half his top order forgot how to bat.

Nathan Lyon

Second Test: 7.5

Series: 7

After playing second fiddle to the quicks against Pakistan, Lyon showed why he is still a crucial piece of Australia’s attack on Day 3 at the Gabba.

Picking up first Kirk McKenzie and then Alick Athanaze with flight and guile, the former trapped LBW sweeping and the latter playing for turn and edging to slip, without the off-spinner’s three-wicket haul the Aussies would have been chasing a lot more than 216.

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Josh Hazlewood

Third Test: 8

Series: 8

Impossible to get away, the big quick’s five wickets for the Test, off the back of a superb performance in Adelaide, came at a remarkable economy rate of under two runs per over.

All were caught in the cordon or by Carey to epitomise Hazlewood’s strength of metronomical accuracy, lifting bounce, and just enough sideways movement to catch the edge.

Didn’t deserve to be the final wicket that fell.

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-30T14:35:25+00:00

RobPeters

Roar Rookie


Watching the video above and Hoggy talk about the "pathetic" WI reminds me that with the WI, you do not poke the bear. There is a precedence to this, and it has never worked out well. Before Greigy started mouthing off in the commentary box, he began in 1976 against a young WI side where he stated that he and the Englishmen were going to make the WI "grovel". A white south african playing for the old enemy in the midst of the apartheid era using the word "grovel". He ended up having to bow to the WI supporters in the outfield at the end of the series. You remember James Faulkner and how he said he didn't like the WI going into a crunch t20 WC game in 2014? And how Sammy slaughtered him in the final over to win the game? And now Hoggy has added himself to that list. Maybe he can be hired by the WI board to give more of these "inspirational" talks. The WI test team will be ranked #1 by the end of the year.

2024-01-29T08:46:18+00:00

ant

Roar Rookie


Dropping Marsh from 3 bad innings is plenty harsh. If you're basing it on that, you may as well drop Labuschagne or Smith, whove had more bad innings than Marsh recently. Besides, if we want Renshaw coming into the team, we'd want him as an opener.

2024-01-29T08:37:52+00:00

ant

Roar Rookie


no, "unbalanced" is just your opinion. Smith and Green were the only two batters to put on a decent show in the second innings.

2024-01-29T07:02:39+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Or that opener goes cheaply and we don’t have the benefit of Green’s 42.

2024-01-29T07:01:28+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


The other Joseph was bowling in the 140's as well. It was not easy out there under overcast skies on a wearing pitch.

2024-01-29T07:00:26+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Plus we could have had two wickets but for a dropped catch. In fact catching probably cost us the match in the end.

2024-01-29T06:19:01+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Could’ve done the exact same thing at 4 and we could have another steady opener in and not have such a shaky middle order.

2024-01-29T05:53:08+00:00

Mick Cooney

Roar Rookie


He was facing a mediocre attack with the exception of Joseph who could only bowl every second over.

2024-01-29T04:25:57+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


That Warner's away record was significantly inferior to his home record is simple fact. Opposition bowlers would still recognise that in any particular innings he was capable of punishing the fielding team. He was still a player they were very happy to see the back of.

2024-01-29T03:42:09+00:00

astro

Roar Rookie


Pain-staking in as much as he never looked that comfortable...Even when scoring runs, he looked like he was a candidate to get out at any time.

2024-01-29T03:41:02+00:00

astro

Roar Rookie


Agreed. Smith will no doubt do well as an opener, but Aus batting line up looks very unbalanced with him as an opener, and Green at 4.

2024-01-29T03:37:11+00:00

astro

Roar Rookie


Aus were very well positioned on the last day, needing 156 with 8 wickets in hand, and yet somehow its Cummins' fault? Come on...

2024-01-29T03:05:29+00:00

Tana Mir

Roar Rookie


“opposition sides don’t fear him anywhere near as much as they used to David Warner” Especially Stuart Board or anyone that could roll an arm outside Australia totally feared Warner.

2024-01-29T01:18:23+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


All these weird comments online saying how Smith was selfish and batted for red ink... I'm just left scratching my head. The guy literally ramped a 6 trying to get us home.

2024-01-28T22:02:31+00:00

Gharner

Roar Rookie


May have given us 10-20. May also have given us 0 or an injured bowler (particularly on the evidence of Hazlewood's 2nd innings), almost certainly means we don't get a wicket that evening. There's a reason 36% of D/N Tests have featured 'unusual' declarations.

2024-01-28T21:21:46+00:00

Little Billy Bagwell

Roar Rookie


Green is the golden boy in the boys club. He will be picked forever and a day. Marsh should be dropped for NZ. Replaced by Renshaw to glue up the lower order. Simples.

2024-01-28T21:10:22+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


Any complaint on the declaration can only be hindsight. Certainly I think the Windies would have much rather that Australia batted on another few overs and not left them starting their innings with that tricky 10 overs under lights. Credit there has to go to the Windies who only lost the 1 wicket in that period and minimised the damage so they could face the next day positively.

2024-01-28T20:41:50+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


Smith is not a good opener because you don’t like how he bats with the tail? That’s one of the strangest arguments I’ve ever heard! Almost as bizarre as wanting Mitch Marsh to bowl more than Cameron Green.

2024-01-28T20:38:21+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


Having looked well and truly out of his depth in the first innings at the Gabba, as well as in his only knock in Adelaide, Green’s painstaking 42 in the run chase was a positive step in the right direction for the man anointed as Australian cricket’s next big thing. In what way was Green’s innings painstaking? He scored at a strike rate of 57, which is pretty decent in test cricket. Painstaking is scoring at half that rate.

2024-01-28T19:17:27+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Carey was in the 2023 World XI!!!

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