spring hall convert
Well-known member
I didn't really go along with the school of thought that last year's touring Ashes side was the worst Australian side to tour England. I remember the 1989 series and the Australian side that year was pretty mediocre, despite beating England 4-0. It helped that England self-destructed that year and got through 29 players in 6 tests. You could see that Australia were a work in progress last summer and had they selected Mitchell Johnson for the tour, the series would've been much more closely fought.
The big difference for Australia, other than Johnson's resurgence and Ryan Harris staying fit is the introduction of David Warner at the top of the order. Not only is he scoring runs regularly, he is scoring quickly. The last test against South Africa he scored 2 centuries and the 2nd innings he scored 145 off about 155 balls! Makes such a difference if you have an opener getting the scoreboard accelerating early on and converting good starts, as it means the middle order aren't then pressurised to whack the covers off the ball the moment they come in. Australia had missed that type of player at the top of the order since Matthew Hayden retired, and England haven't had one consistently since Marcus Trescothick left the scene. They badly needed one in the winter and their lack of one heaped all the pressure on Ian Bell and Kevin Pietersen.
It was a good time to play South Africa, mind you. Their best player since their re-introduction to test cricket retiring before the series began left a gaping hole in their middle order and in the dressing room, their best strike bowler was short of full fitness and then their inspirational captain decides he's had enough.
The change of coach is/was the difference. Clearly.