Monday, January 12, 2015

Observations from the 2015 Sydney Test


David Warner kisses the spot where Phil Hughes was hit by the bouncer that resulted in his death

As I predicted prior to the start of the series,  the Border-Gavaskar trophy was won by the Australians two matches to nil. I may have got the individual test results wrong, but the overall score line is what matters. So it is time to celebrate !!
The Sydney test itself ended up in a draw, Australia batted first and made 572 before India replied with 475 in their innings. Australia made a quick fire 251 before declaring and setting the Indians 349 to win which seemed unlikely from the start. The Indians held on in the last ten overs to force the draw.
What were the takeaways from the Sydney Test:
  • An emerging talent – when Joe Burns was selected it was unexpected, but Joe showed some justification in the decision with fifties in each innings. The second innings was a well-made 66 off only 39 balls with three sixes and eight fours. Burns started his innings slowly with 11 off 12 balls before launching into 55 off the next 27 delivers. It was entertaining, but more importantly it allowed Australia to set a decent target with plenty of overs available to bowl the opposition out. Could Burns be Australia’s next permanent number three?
  • Both captains show the way – Smith and Kohli continued their rich vein of form by scoring hundreds in the first innings, although Kohli may feel that he missed out with only 46 in the second innings. These two batsmen scored 1,461 runs in total for the series with Smith scoring 769 and Kohli contributing 692 for their respective sides. If they maintain their form it will make the ODI series and the World Cup really interesting.
What have we learned from the series?
  • India is now a side in transition – India’s bowling attack is relatively young and spearheaded by Ishant Sharma. There is some promise with Umesh Yadav, whereas Varun Aaron needs to become more consistent and reminds me of a younger Mitchell Johnson. There has been a change in leadership from MS Dhoni to the more combative and aggressive Kohli, which will prove to be a good strategic move in time. The Top 6 can build itself around Kohli and Murali Vijay which should mean that most opposition sides could be chasing some rather large totals.
  • Australia is starting to build consistency – Although its best batsman and regular captain Clarke was missing for most of the series, Australia was still able to post large totals. Smith had a blinder of a series with the bat and seemed to thrive even more with the captaincy role. The Top 6 may need a reshuffle perhaps by moving Burns to three and Australia will most likely need to find another opener within the next 12 months as Rogers is expected to retire soon. At the moment the Top 6 would probably be Warner, Rogers opening with Burns, Smith and Clarke at three, four and five. Number six is difficult but I would put Mitchell Marsh ahead of Watson once he regains fitness. The pace bowling stocks are plentiful for Australia and considering that Siddle only played one test and Cummins, Bird and Faulkner did not play at all, there would appear to be sufficient depth for Australia.
Overall the series started with a tragedy and finished with the tradition of test cricket remaining firmly intact. The cricket was very entertaining with 5,870 runs scored across the four tests. Naturally, the bowlers would think that the wickets were too docile, however there was the possibility of non-draw results in every test.

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