• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

*Official* Third Test at the WACA

Woodster

Well-known member
Well, well, well, a convincing Aussie win to level the series and promise a thrilling end to this Ashes series. Much credit has to be given to the hosts for battling back from a hammering at Adelaide to inflict there own confidence crushing victory, and thoroughly deserved it was.

Johnson and Harris found the Perth conditions very much to their liking, while Hussey's frustrating yet outstanding form continues to ensure he carries the Aussie top six.

As for England's batting it was inept and hopefully a performance that will not be repeated in this series. We have seen England struggle when conditions are spicy like at Perth, Jo'burg, Headingley, etc, and there was a number of dismissals over the two innings that the batsmen should be fuming with. It also seems to take a pitch like this for the Aussie attack to look effective. We know on flatter tracks they struggle to remain disciplined, lack any real penetration, and so it'll be interesting to see what's prepared at Melbourne.

I do believe we can bounceback though, just like we did after Headingley. This doesn't seem to be a group of guys that will mope around and feel sorry for themselves.

As for the next Test, rumours abound that Finn may be rested, ie dropped, and I for one am all in favour of that move, which brings Bresnan and Shahzad into the equation. At this moment in time I personally would edge towards Bresnan being included but I'm sure there'll be much speculation over that in the following days.

Collingwood is another player whose position in the side may come under scrutiny, but I believe England will, and should, persevere with him. Maybe a sensible move would be to demote a place in the batting line-up, but he should for me certainly take to the field at the MCG.
 

wpdavid

Well-known member
Well, well, well, a convincing Aussie win to level the series and promise a thrilling end to this Ashes series. Much credit has to be given to the hosts for battling back from a hammering at Adelaide to inflict there own confidence crushing victory, and thoroughly deserved it was.

Johnson and Harris found the Perth conditions very much to their liking, while Hussey's frustrating yet outstanding form continues to ensure he carries the Aussie top six.

As for England's batting it was inept and hopefully a performance that will not be repeated in this series. We have seen England struggle when conditions are spicy like at Perth, Jo'burg, Headingley, etc, and there was a number of dismissals over the two innings that the batsmen should be fuming with. It also seems to take a pitch like this for the Aussie attack to look effective. We know on flatter tracks they struggle to remain disciplined, lack any real penetration, and so it'll be interesting to see what's prepared at Melbourne.

I do believe we can bounceback though, just like we did after Headingley. This doesn't seem to be a group of guys that will mope around and feel sorry for themselves.

As for the next Test, rumours abound that Finn may be rested, ie dropped, and I for one am all in favour of that move, which brings Bresnan and Shahzad into the equation. At this moment in time I personally would edge towards Bresnan being included but I'm sure there'll be much speculation over that in the following days.

Collingwood is another player whose position in the side may come under scrutiny, but I believe England will, and should, persevere with him. Maybe a sensible move would be to demote a place in the batting line-up, but he should for me certainly take to the field at the MCG.
Brave man pointing out that our batting was inept - one or two of the locals won't be happy about you not giving enough credit to the Aus bowlers. But you're right - especially in the 2nd innings, where they really didn't appear interested in guttsing it out against some decent test match quality bowling.

It would be hard to see us coming back from this if there hadn't been one or two precursors over the years. I'm hoping for a repeat of the SA tour in 2004/5 when we played like absolute amateurs in the 3rd test but then cleaned up in the 4th.

I suppose it all boils down to Johnson. If he bowls like he did in the first innings, then we're pretty much stuffed. If not, then our batsmen just need to stand up and be counted instead of only fighting over who could find the biggest white flag to wave.

As for Finn vs Bresnan vs Shahzad - I dunno. Finn looked a real liability in the 2nd innings despite taking a few wickets. I really don't rate Bresnan, but I suspect that Shahzad isn't quite all he's cracked up to be. If this is another 'result' pitch and Swann ain't going to get a bowl after Day 3, then perhaps we'd actually be better playing four quicks. Maybe. It'd be a brave man to make that particular call.

Strauss needs a better game as captain though. Sloppy for much of Day 1 and ill-judged for much of day 3. Not his finest effort imo.
 

Woodster

Well-known member
Brave man pointing out that our batting was inept - one or two of the locals won't be happy about you not giving enough credit to the Aus bowlers. But you're right - especially in the 2nd innings, where they really didn't appear interested in guttsing it out against some decent test match quality bowling.

It would be hard to see us coming back from this if there hadn't been one or two precursors over the years. I'm hoping for a repeat of the SA tour in 2004/5 when we played like absolute amateurs in the 3rd test but then cleaned up in the 4th.

I suppose it all boils down to Johnson. If he bowls like he did in the first innings, then we're pretty much stuffed. If not, then our batsmen just need to stand up and be counted instead of only fighting over who could find the biggest white flag to wave.

As for Finn vs Bresnan vs Shahzad - I dunno. Finn looked a real liability in the 2nd innings despite taking a few wickets. I really don't rate Bresnan, but I suspect that Shahzad isn't quite all he's cracked up to be. If this is another 'result' pitch and Swann ain't going to get a bowl after Day 3, then perhaps we'd actually be better playing four quicks. Maybe. It'd be a brave man to make that particular call.

Strauss needs a better game as captain though. Sloppy for much of Day 1 and ill-judged for much of day 3. Not his finest effort imo.
Yes I'm sure they won't be happy for a lack of credit for their bowlers, but they do derserve some, well Harris and Johnson anyway.

You don't know what you're going to get with Johnson the following session let alone the following Test, so it could conceivably be back to the Johnson that gets slapped about at Melbourne. He's had his one Test where he looks a potential world class bowler and clean striking lower order batsman.

It would be a brave man to leave Swann out, and possibly a crazy one. Without knowing whether the pitch will turn later in the game or at least offer enough for Swann to be effective, then to leave him out would be a huge gamble. Although he wasn't brilliant at Perth was still underbowled in that second innings.

I agree I don't think it was Strauss anywhere near his best as captain in that last Test.
 

stephen

Well-known member
Johnson looked more than world class - if he bowled all the time as he did in the first innings we'd already be pronouncing him an all time great. He was getting that late inswing that is so deadly to right handers and was incredibly accurate. It really was a case of Dr Jekkyl and Mr Hyde when you compare his Brisbane and WACA performances.
 

Woodster

Well-known member
Johnson looked more than world class - if he bowled all the time as he did in the first innings we'd already be pronouncing him an all time great. He was getting that late inswing that is so deadly to right handers and was incredibly accurate. It really was a case of Dr Jekkyl and Mr Hyde when you compare his Brisbane and WACA performances.
Steady on, looked more than world class would be a slight overstatement, and if he was producing performances like that on anything like a consistent basis, rather once a year, he would soon be thought of as a top bowler.
 

Uppercut

Well-known member
I think it's fair to describe him as something a bit above world-class when on form. As an ardent McGrath fan I'm pretty unwilling to disregard consistency just for the sake of it. But I've certainly never seen anyone else bowl a spell as good as Johnson can. I've seen bowlers match his express pace, awkward angle, hooping inswing, raw aggression and pinpoint accuracy, but not all at once.

I guess it's all a bit surplus to requirements when any of those attributes coupled with the last one is generally more than enough, but it's pretty damn good to watch.
 

Burgey

Well-known member
That spell was as good as anything I've seen since Ambrose 7-1 at Perth in 92-93 tbh. It doesn't mean he's necessarily above world class, but that spell would have troubled anyone, from any era. It was fast, accurate and physically threatening. I still can't get over the ball that got Collingwood. Honestly, he's no Bradman but FMD, how often does a bloke batting five in a test line up miss a defensive shot by a foot?*










*Current Clarke and Ponting excepted :ph34r:
 

Son Of Coco

Well-known member
Yes I'm sure they won't be happy for a lack of credit for their bowlers, but they do derserve some, well Harris and Johnson anyway.
Think you're also under-rating the effect going for not many runs off 10 overs whilst holding down an end had too (Hilfenhaus).

The difference in this test (apart from the extra juice in the wicket) was the lines our bowlers bowled. Siddle was (apparently) a bit sloppy, but the other 3 were on target for most of the match. Makes it hard to rack up scores of 500+ when you have guys bowling decent lines for 4 days.

As I said before, I think the main difference overall between the two teams was the efforts of the bowlers. With England being much better for most of the first two tests. The Australian effort was much improved as a whole this test. I think the English batsmen being 'in the form of their lives' was played up in the media after they got runs on flat decks against a very poor bowling effort. Full credit to them for doing so, but the only bat who truly looked like he was in some form and could score runs anywhere during this test was Bell.

You may be right about the Aussie bowlers being ill-disciplined on flat wickets though. I guess we might have the opportunity to find out in Melbourne. If Australia can keep bowling consistent lines it'll be interesting. If not, England will probably find themselves 'in the form of their lives' again.
 
Last edited:

stephen

Well-known member
That spell was as good as anything I've seen since Ambrose 7-1 at Perth in 92-93 tbh. It doesn't mean he's necessarily above world class, but that spell would have troubled anyone, from any era. It was fast, accurate and physically threatening. I still can't get over the ball that got Collingwood. Honestly, he's no Bradman but FMD, how often does a bloke batting five in a test line up miss a defensive shot by a foot?*


*Current Clarke and Ponting excepted :ph34r:
Exactly. The one that got Tremlett was the ball I thought was unplayable by anyone. It angled across the right hander, landed just outside the off stump, came back in late and hit the exact top of off. A total jaffa and unplayable by anyone.

His bowling at the WACA was some of the best fast bowling that I've witnessed. The batsmen didn't throw their wickets away, Johnson earned their wickets with unplayable deliveries.

Johnson's problem has always been consistency. When he's on song he's virtually unplayable, particularly for right handers. When he's off he's no better than a third grade trundler.
 

Pup Clarke

Well-known member
Hyperbole much? It was a very good spell of hostile fast bowling, but honestly, he wasn't 'unplayable'.

I'm trying not to do a disservice to him, but the English batsman could of played his indippers better, especially Trott and Pietersen.
 

Uppercut

Well-known member
Think you're also under-rating the effect going for not many runs off 10 overs whilst holding down an end had too (Hilfenhaus).
It's almost exactly the job he performed equally well at the Gabba. Whether it's labelled tight and pressure-building or bland and ineffective just depends on how everyone else bowls.
 

Uppercut

Well-known member
Hyperbole much? It was a very good spell of hostile fast bowling, but honestly, he wasn't 'unplayable'.

I'm trying not to do a disservice to him, but the English batsman could of played his indippers better, especially Trott and Pietersen.
Hahaha you can say that about every ball. "Could have played it better".
 

Spark

Global Moderator
I think you should give Trott a break there. That was almost the first ball Trott has ever seen Johnson swing. It's not like it swung from the hand, Hilfenhaus-like. Very hard to play if you're not expecting it.
 

Uppercut

Well-known member
Well maybe he could have got a bat on that specific 90mph late-inswinger from a lefty bowling over the wicket but without a ****-ton of luck he was going to miss one eventually anyway because no one's good enough to face that kind of bowling for very long.
 

Son Of Coco

Well-known member
Hyperbole much? It was a very good spell of hostile fast bowling, but honestly, he wasn't 'unplayable'.

I'm trying not to do a disservice to him, but the English batsman could of played his indippers better, especially Trott and Pietersen.
They could have, if they'd expected it and it wasn't swinging so late. I think Pietersen would've had to be a little lucky to get through that spell when he was new to the crease.
 

Son Of Coco

Well-known member
It's almost exactly the job he performed equally well at the Gabba. Whether it's labelled tight and pressure-building or bland and ineffective just depends on how everyone else bowls.
Yeah, true. I thought he bowled in better areas than at The Gabba. Didn't stray onto the pads as much. At the moment Hilf is not going to be relied on as the chief wicket-taker. If others are doing that though and he bowls the same as he did at the WACA then he's very effective at holding down an end.
 

Rant0r

Well-known member
Brave man pointing out that our batting was inept - one or two of the locals won't be happy about you not giving enough credit to the Aus bowlers. But you're right - especially in the 2nd innings, where they really didn't appear interested in guttsing it out against some decent test match quality bowling.

It would be hard to see us coming back from this if there hadn't been one or two precursors over the years. I'm hoping for a repeat of the SA tour in 2004/5 when we played like absolute amateurs in the 3rd test but then cleaned up in the 4th.

I suppose it all boils down to Johnson. If he bowls like he did in the first innings, then we're pretty much stuffed. If not, then our batsmen just need to stand up and be counted instead of only fighting over who could find the biggest white flag to wave.

As for Finn vs Bresnan vs Shahzad - I dunno. Finn looked a real liability in the 2nd innings despite taking a few wickets. I really don't rate Bresnan, but I suspect that Shahzad isn't quite all he's cracked up to be. If this is another 'result' pitch and Swann ain't going to get a bowl after Day 3, then perhaps we'd actually be better playing four quicks. Maybe. It'd be a brave man to make that particular call.

Strauss needs a better game as captain though. Sloppy for much of Day 1 and ill-judged for much of day 3. Not his finest effort imo.
Not a lot like my embarrassing countrymen whinging about how bad we were, and how the opposition couldn't possibly have been better

That spell was as good as anything I've seen since Ambrose 7-1 at Perth in 92-93 tbh. It doesn't mean he's necessarily above world class, but that spell would have troubled anyone, from any era. It was fast, accurate and physically threatening. I still can't get over the ball that got Collingwood. Honestly, he's no Bradman but FMD, how often does a bloke batting five in a test line up miss a defensive shot by a foot?*










*Current Clarke and Ponting excepted :ph34r:
Awesome spell

Think you're also under-rating the effect going for not many runs off 10 overs whilst holding down an end had too (Hilfenhaus).

The difference in this test (apart from the extra juice in the wicket) was the lines our bowlers bowled. Siddle was (apparently) a bit sloppy, but the other 3 were on target for most of the match. Makes it hard to rack up scores of 500+ when you have guys bowling decent lines for 4 days.

As I said before, I think the main difference overall between the two teams was the efforts of the bowlers. With England being much better for most of the first two tests. The Australian effort was much improved as a whole this test. I think the English batsmen being 'in the form of their lives' was played up in the media after they got runs on flat decks against a very poor bowling effort. Full credit to them for doing so, but the only bat who truly looked like he was in some form and could score runs anywhere during this test was Bell.

You may be right about the Aussie bowlers being ill-disciplined on flat wickets though. I guess we might have the opportunity to find out in Melbourne. If Australia can keep bowling consistent lines it'll be interesting. If not, England will probably find themselves 'in the form of their lives' again.
Enough said previously

I think you should give Trott a break there. That was almost the first ball Trott has ever seen Johnson swing. It's not like it swung from the hand, Hilfenhaus-like. Very hard to play if you're not expecting it.
:laugh:
 
Top