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Michael Clarke's men have proved English critics right

Updated on: 28 July,2013 01:59 AM IST  | 
Ian Chappell |

Current Australia side have finally proved the English media right with a poor show after 1972 & 1989 teams proved them wrong

Michael Clarke's men have proved English critics right

Before departing for this disastrous tour of England, the current Australian side was compared to the 1972 and 1989 teams.


Michael Clarke
Australia’s Michael Clarke is bowled by England’s James Anderson on Day One of the first Ashes Test in Nottingham recently. PIC/AFP


Let’s get it straight, the only thing the three teams have in common is they were all lambasted by the English media as; “The worst to leave Australian shores.”u00a0In 1972 and 1989 Australia had a number of good young players in the team with a few more waiting in the wings. In 1972 we didn’t know just how good Dennis Lillee, Greg Chappell and Rod Marsh were going to be but there was never any doubt they were Test class.

They confirmed their status in no uncertain terms with Lillee taking 31 wickets, Chappell scoring two crucial centuries and Marsh gathering 23 victims in the series.u00a0The current side’s inconsistencies are often excused on the basis of inexperience. The 1972 Australian side that triumphed at Lord’s boasted two debutantes and seven of the eleven players had between them played a total of eighteen Tests.

That side went on to level the series 2-all at the Oval against what was then regarded as the best team in world cricket.u00a0The 1972 Australian team then went on to become the best side around as the core of the touring party were complemented by a number of other good young players who had performed well at Sheffield Shield level.

In 1989, Allan Border’s team sprung a surprise on a struggling England side and won the series 4-nil. Once again, this team had a core of good young players in Mark Taylor, Steve Waugh and Ian Healy who were aided and abetted by some vastly experienced senior players. The core of this team carried all before them, once again with the addition of other talented players who had succeeded at Shield level.

And therein lies the crucial difference between those two sides and Michael Clarke’s team. When players of the earlier eras performed well at Shield level you could be fairly certain they’d make a successful transition to Test cricket. u00a0In the 1960’s Garry Sobers, then the best player in the game, described the Shield competition as; “The toughest cricket I’ve played outside Test matches.”

When Australia was beating everyone in the late nineties and early two thousands people told me it was the coaches and the academies that made the team strong. “Bollocks,” was my response. It’s the same as when Don Bradman’s 1948 Invincibles were so good. It’s the system that produces the outstanding players.

That system was a far cry from the current Shield competition, which is virtually bereft of Test players and runs a distant second in importance to the glitzy BBL. Not only can’t Clarke rely on any strong recruits waiting at home for the next tilt against England, he’s already handicapped by an order containing some marginal Test batsmen.

No patience
There are complaints about the current Test batsmen not showing patience and being wayward in their shot selection. Patience and shot selection result from a player being sure of his technique. When he’s comfortable, a player can ride out a storm of good bowling for an hour or so and then cash in later in the innings. Batsmen who aren’t certain of their survival instincts tend to panic and play indisciplined shots.

Far too many members of Clarke’s team are batting mainly for survival. Any batsman who isn’t looking to score at every opportunity will stunt his footwork and limit the chances of success.u00a0Clarke is saddled with the flawed products of a once great system that has been allowed to decay.u00a0And it’s not as if the administrators weren’t warned.

More than a decade ago a former player told the administrators there was trouble looming; “A lot of the Sheffield Shield competition is club cricket in drag,” he told them. These thoughts were echoed by at least one other former international.u00a0The Board’s response echoed the words written by Don McLean in his hit song Vincent; “They would not listen; they did not know how - perhaps they’ll listen now.” u00a0And perhaps, after numerous tries, the English media has finally got it right. This could well be the worst batting side to ever leave Australia’s shores.


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