Darren Lehmann’s bowl fast, score faster gameplan failed spectacularly in 2015 but Australia dominated this series through spectacular endurance at the crease“Our plans worked perfectly.” One could imagine Darren Lehmann as a supervillain. That saurian monolith of a scone, complete with Blofeldian vasculature. Spinning around in a high-backed chair with that knowing squint. More likely to be stroking a bottle of white wine than a white cat – a crisp Riesling, perhaps, to cut through the third-session torpor? Come, come, Mr Cook, you derive just as much pleasure from crushing touring teams as I do.In its inception, back in the dim mists of 2013, the Lehmann masterplan could be generously described as uncomplicated. Bowl fast, score faster. Aggression was the...
The pace trio of Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins, supported by spinner Nathan Lyon, are a rare gift for captain Steve SmithKeep the bowling attack fit and healthy over the next 18 months and there is no reason why Australia cannot break a drought that stretches back to 2001 and win the next Ashes series in England. In fact it looks there for the taking if they do.Right now Steve Smith is a blessed Test captain who possesses an envious blend of bowlers in Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon. Never before have a side had only four wicket-takers over the course of a five-match series but is easy to see how it occurred. Related:...
England and Australia jostle for the awards for best moment, match, and breakthrough player. Best player? Well, maybe the award should be renamedSteve Smith is a freak. To think he started the series with a supposed drought of international centuries having not raised the bat since March. This really is a special player we are watching. Adam Collins Related: Trevor Bayliss to stand down as England head coach at end of 2019 Ashes Related: Australia’s Steve Smith puts winning the Ashes in England on his bucket list | Adam Collins "The ball of the #Ashes.""Ball of the 21st century..."Mitchell Starc's delivery to dismiss James Vince impressed pretty much everyone in the cricket world... #ItsTheAshes pic.twitter.com/Gmbb1v6YOn Related: The Ashes 2017-18: England...
Joe Root and Trevor Bayliss safe despite Ashes humbling but selectors’ emphasis on character over record and a reluctance to shuffle the pack needs scrutinyIt has been gruelling for England’s players but they should not forget this Ashes tour in a hurry. Every humiliation, every defeat should be stored away.Remember it well: the preposterous head-butt, the missed opportunities such as Australia’s 209 for seven becoming 328 all out in Brisbane and England’s 368 for four becoming 403 all out in Perth, Steve Smith batting, the Marsh brothers reuniting, the bouncer barrage at the tail, Smith batting, left-handers groping against Nathan Lyon, the hashtag “Beat England” everywhere and repeated on our screens by prime minister Malcolm Turnbull one moment, Usain Bolt, even...
Long list of absences including Serena Williams and Andy Murray means less-known talent could bring some unwelcome surprises in MelbourneHard to believe, isn’t it, but we will soon celebrate the 16th anniversary of a very strange tennis match. In late January 2002 the innocuous, double-fisted Swede Thomas Johansson took down the formidable albeit irascible Marat Safin in four sets to win the Australian Open. My favourite detail from the final is that Johansson almost missed the start: his coach, Magnus Tideman, neglected somehow to order a courtesy car and they had to hail a cab to travel to the stadium. It was, pretty much, the last truly surprising outcome in men’s tennis.Vague memories of that tournament have come trickling back...