Cricket 2014
Australian Turnaround
February 15th 2014
So much for Australia having a rude
shock in South Africa. Their top order
batting remains fragile, but that becomes irrelevant when the middle and lower
order triple and quadruple the score and the Australian bowling, led by an
unstoppable Mitch Johnson, continues to be devastating. Suddenly, England’s
performance in Australia does not look quite so bad.
England’s problems have been
well documented. Jimmy Anderson and Stuart Broad were making breakthroughs with
the new ball, but Graeme Swann’s problems and the lack of threatening support
bowling saw Australia recover time and again and, the England batting failed to
give their bowlers time to recover from their efforts. The wise looked at South
Africa’s powerful batting line-up and relentless bowling and saw that things
would be different. Well, they have not been.
It is like looking at the Ashes again:
Australia 24-2, 98-4 and looking in trouble? Trouble? In comes Steve Smith,
scores a century, this time it is Shaun Marsh who supports him with another and
they put on 233 together. A clatter of wickets and you think that South Africa
could just regain the momentum by ripping out the lower order but, no, Johnson
and Harris put on valuable runs and see Australia almost up to 400. Poor start
for South Africa, who start to recover and back comes Mitch Johnson… It has
followed the pattern of the Ashes Tests line by line, right down to the total
disintegration of the South African fielding in the second innings.
South Africa have barely managed
as many runs in their two innings as Australia managed in their first after
being put in on a lively pitch and, suddenly, are full of doubts and being
questioned. Sound familiar? You look at how the South Africans have fallen
apart and wonder whether or not there is any way that they can avoid a 3-0
whitewash. There are similar questions to the ones England were asked. People are
saying that there is no steel to the side without the multi-faceted
contribution of Jacques Kallis with bat, ball and in the field. And Graeme
Smith looked clueless and unable to stop his side’s slide having given
Australia first use of a pitch that deteriorated rapidly, although the South
African effort in the field in the second innings was so poor that Australia’s
batsmen still racked up the runs almost without being inconvenienced in the
slightest.
What is the change? Take a look
back to the 4th Test last summer where, at Chester-le-Street,
Australia disintegrated to defeat having looked in the box seat. Ryan Harris
was bowling high ‘80s, with the occasional ball close to, or a fraction over
90mph. He was no faster than Stuart Broad and even Jimmy Anderson was matching
him on the speed gun in the first innings. Move forward to Centurion: Ryan
Harris was ramping it up to over 94mph – Mitch Johnson had a higher average
speed, but the fastest ball of the first innings came from Ryan Harris. Having
Mitch Johnson at the other end has added 5mph – that is 8km/h) to Ryan Harris –
who has gone from a decent quick, to being just as nasty as anyone in world
cricket. Last summer England knew that when they saw off Ryan Harris and the
new ball what would follow would relieve the pressure. Now, first England’s and
then South Africa’s batsmen have discovered that the pressure is relentless
from both ends and that, even if they see off Mitch Johnson – which they are
not managing – Ryan Harris is a far faster and nastier proposition than before
to support him. With Peter Siddle now relegated to first change, where he makes
a far greater contribution than he could with the new ball, keeping things
tight and maintaining the pressure while Harris and Johnson rest.
The change in Mitch Johnson is
even more remarkable than the one in Ryan Harris. He was capable of great
spells and great matches, but would always return quickly to bowling with all
the control of a spray gun, but none of the threat. After his return in the
ODIs in England, the ODIs in India, the Ashes and now the series against South
Africa, he has sustained threat, hostility and accuracy for longer than anyone could
have imagined possible and has transformed Australia. While he continues to do
it and Ryan Harris acts as his sidekick, Australia are proving unstoppable.
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