cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Beyond The Blues Beyond The Test World Different Strokes From the Editor Girls Aloud Iain O'Brien Inbox
It Figures Pak Spin Shot Selection The Buzz The Confectionery Stall The Surfer Tour Diaries

Cricinfo Blogs Home

« Strauss must focus on the future | | Where will England go from here? »

Time for best teams to fight it out

Posted on 08/25/2009 in Ashes

Australia have slipped to No. 4 in the Test rankings and that may be good for the game which is struggling to sustain spectator interest in many parts of the world, writes Gideon Haigh in the Australian.

This summer in England has been a cricket crossroads. The Ashes of 2009 followed closely two of cricket's hottest versions of its new variant: the Indian Premier League in South Africa, and the Twenty20 World Championship in England. In fact, to so soon after be plunged into a five-Test series, cricket's most traditional and now almost obsolete format, felt a little like dressing in period costume for an activity of the society for creative anachronism. What ensued was not a vintage Ashes series. The teams were too weak, and the Tests generally too one-sided. The advantage did not fluctuate; it swung back and forth like a wrecking ball, indicative of two teams at war with their frailties as much as each other.

Yet they were genuine tests, of ability, adaptability, character, endurance. One saw cricketers in extremis: indulging in mass man-love one week, fit for trauma counselling the next, performing tasks requiring extraordinary patience and self-denial, such as Ricky Ponting's superfine 150 at Cardiff and Michael Clarke's sublime 136 at Lord's, then exhibiting blink-of-an-eye brilliance like the run-outs executed from close to the bat by Andrew Strauss and Simon Katich at the Oval. Some games have one or the other: no game apart from Test cricket has both to such extent.

In the same paper Peter Lalor talks to some former Australian players and coaches who believe Ponting should remain captain despite having twice lost the Ashes in England.

In the Age Greg Baum calls for some calm and perspective following the defeat.

For two decades, Australia's winning needed little explanation. Now, seemingly, its defeat has no alibi. The fact is that this was a contest between two pretty plain old cricket teams, neither of which was able to sustain its efforts.

Reporters at the Sydney Morning Herald try to find out why the Australian team, unlike English and South African ones, is still predominantly white.

 
Feedback Feedback

Categories
2009 English domestic season (4) American Premier League (1) Ashes (325) Australia in India 2008-09 (101) Australia in South Africa 2008-09 (14) Australian cricket (794) Bangladesh cricket (27) Betting/Corruption (1) Bob Woolmer (8) Books (7) Bowling actions (3) Champions Trophy (55) Champions Twenty20 League (16) Charity (4) Commentary (65) Compaq Cup (1) Corruption (2) Cricinfo (3) Cricket (17) Cricket and war (1) Cricket books (8) DLF Cup (2) Drugs (2) England in India 2008-09 (66) England in South Africa 2009-10 (12) England in West Indies 2008-09 (72) English cricket (819) Falkland Islands (1) France (1) ICC (79) ICC World Twenty20 (58) ICC anti-doping policy (10) India in Australia, 2007-08 (65) India in New Zealand, 2008-09 (34) India in Pakistan 2008-09 (1) India in Sri Lanka 2008 (18) India in Sri Lanka 2008-09 (2) Indian Cricket League (27) Indian Premier League (204) Indian cricket (594) Interviews (6) Irish cricket (3) Kenyan cricket (2) Miscellaneous (205) Neutral venues (1) New Zealand cricket (250) New Zealand in Australia 2009 (4) New Zealand in Sri Lanka 2009 (4) Obituaries (15) Offbeat (131) Olympics (1) One-day cricket (10) Pakistan cricket (127) Pakistan in England (56) Pakistan in Sri Lanka 2009 (1) Racism (1) Security concerns (19) Shootout in Lahore (10) Sourav Ganguly (1) South Africa in Australia 2008-09 (36) South Africa in England 2008 (49) South African cricket (128) Sri Lankan cricket (84) Stanford 20/20 for 20 (24) Stats (3) T20 Canada (1) Technology (12) Television (24) Test Championship (2) Test rankings (2) The Delhi crisis (1) The Stanford saga (6) Twenty20 (60) UAE cricket (1) Umpires (48) West Indies cricket (125) West Indies in England 2009 (14) West Indies in New Zealand, 2008-09 (8) Women's cricket (27) World Cup 2007 (133) Zimbabwe cricket (47)
Recent Posts
Time for England to come good The God of fine things Dead track sure way to kill Test cricket Nehra's superb transformation Martin's wise head running on young legs Do you want to be Australia's Test captain? Time for Australia to face facts What Sachin Tendulkar has that Don Bradman didn’t South Africa's wily ways are more of a let-down To redevelop or not to redevelop Lord's
Archives
November 2009October 2009September 2009August 2009July 2009June 2009May 2009April 2009March 2009February 2009January 2009December 2008November 2008October 2008September 2008August 2008July 2008June 2008May 2008April 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007October 2007September 2007August 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007April 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006May 2006April 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006December 2005November 2005October 2005September 2005
RSS Feeds RSS Feed
© Cricinfo 2009
website stats