David Saker, England’s bowling coach hinted at a selection blunder
during the course of the day and by the end of day he will probably admitted to
it, at least in his own mind.
England brought over a group of fast bowlers that more
resembled a basketball team because they expected them to prosper on the bouncy
tracks in Australia. But despite been in the doldrums in the series, refuse to
pick them. England dropped one after the
1st Test and starved the other two of an opportunity on a track that
was tailor made for them.
The axing of Tremlett is self explanatory, the giant bowler
from Surry had lost a yard of pace that made him such a threat last time
England toured these shores. Listening to a series of press conferences on the tour,
Finn has not bowled as per the coach’s expectations despite constantly clocking
around the 90mph. Which leaves us with
the third tall timber, Boyd Rankin, the former Ireland player was rushed into
the England Test squad on the basics of strong performance against the
Australians in the ODI series in England. Rankin ability to extract excruciating
bounce and bowl close to 90mph troubled the Australians.
Today England could well have done with a bowler capable of
bowling over 140kmph constantly. The only time England bowler’s extracted disconcerting
bounce for the Australian batsmen was when Broad bowled an inspiring spell
leading up the Bailey wicket. Broad really bent his back, bowled each ball over
140km/h and got his rewards when Bailey was beaten by pace. Brad Haddin, Australia’s form batsmen also
looked clueless at times as the ball wrapped him on the body three times in
space of 12 balls. All of a sudden the wicket seem to spring to life.
On a day, centurion Steve Smith hit seven savage pull shots
to the boundary only one was executed off Broad.
Throughout the series the Australian bowlers have bowled
faster, hit the deck harder to trouble the English batsmen with pace and
bounce. In the process they have showed England
the way to bowl on the hard Australian wickets with the Kookaburra ball.
England have had a chance to take the game by the scruff of the
neck not once, not twice but three times in this series only to be undone by
resilient Australian lower order. Any
lower order struggles to cope with pace and bounce but only when it is over 140
Km/h, especially the Australian tale that has been bred on the bouncy tracks. The issue is England simply hasn’t had a quick
bowler at their disposal. A decision they could well live to regret given the
stock that was available.
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