After Ashes defeat, Australia loses No.1 Test ranking

London, Aug.24 (ANI): Australia has officially lost its No.1 Test ranking, plunging to fourth place in the world, behind South Africa, Sri Lanka and India.

Australia has officially or unofficially been the No.1 Test side in the world since Mark Taylor’s team beat the West Indies in the Caribbean in 1995.

ICC Test Championship (Rank/Team/Rating)

1. South Africa 122

2. Sri Lanka 119

3. India 119

4. Australia 116

5. England 105

6. Pakistan 84

7. New Zealand 82

8. West Indies 76

9. Bangladesh 13 (ANI)

Ashes series loss will end Australia’s dominance of world cricket

London, Aug. 22 (ANI): Should Australia lose the fifth and final Ashes Test being played at The Oval, it could signal the end the side’s domination of world cricket.

According to the Courier Mail, only something very special, or days of unforecast rain, can prevent Australia losing the fifth Test, the Ashes and ultimately tumbling as low as fourth on the official world Test rankings. Australia is already down to third on the one-day rankings.

A loss will leave Ricky Ponting, one of Australia’s greatest players and most successful leaders, just the second captain in 132 years of Ashes history to lose two series in England.

The other was Australia’s first touring captain, Billy Murdoch, well over 100 years ago.

It shapes as Australia’s third series loss in five, which includes its first home Test series loss in 17 years last summer.

When Mark Taylor led his side to victory on the 1995 tour of the West Indies, it was considered the unofficial handing over of the world championship.

Australia was already halfway through winning eight successive Ashes series and three successive World Cups followed, the last two with undefeated campaigns.

The reality is stark. For all the great names to retire or drift away over the past two years, more will follow.

Brett Lee has 310 Test wickets but did not play a Test on tour and will be 33 when Australia next turns out in a Test.

Stuart Clark is already that age and on this tour has also been behind the new pace trio of Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus, the three leading wicket-takers in the series.

Most worrying is the continued collapse of Mike Hussey in the middle order. Another confused duck has reinforced his fourth poor series in a row.

That way he can get some runs and some confidence in the Sheffield Shield for Western Australia.

Phil Hughes is the most exciting of the 20-somethings coming through and he was dropped after two Tests, deemed not to have the technique to survive at Test level.

It may be that Phil Jaques can regain fitness after debilitating back problems and the form which saw him score three centuries in 11 Tests, freeing up Shane Watson to move down the order as a real all-rounder.

In the end it’s not the big numbers that matter but the big moments that will count.

Fast bowler Stuart Broad has again highlighted that when this Australian side is bad, it is terrible. (ANI)

Border reveals his All Stars Ashes team over last 30-years

Sydney, June 24(ANI): Former Australian cricket captain Allan Border has named Australia’s best players to have played against England in the past 30 years in July’s special Ashes issue of Alpha magazine.

Border, who made his Test debut 30 years ago, was the skipper of the 1989 Australian team to tour England, and the ensuing 4-0 thumping set the tone for a 16-year Aussie dominance that lasted until 2005.

Though no cricketer has had an essential role as Border had in the team, he still hasn’t included himself in the All Stars list.

“I’m the team manager and orange boy,” Fox Sports quoted Border, as saying.

Border’s list includes- Mark Taylor, Matthew Hayden, Ricky Ponting, Greg Chappell, Mark Waugh, Steve Waugh, Adam Gilchrist, Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath, Dennis Lillee, Terry Alderman and Jeff Thomson.

Commenting about Mark Taylor, Border said: “His performances against England, both home and away, were outstanding at the top of the order. I have very fond memories of 1989. His 839 runs really got us on our way and made things a lot easier.”

Ricky Ponting has been depicted as the dominant player of his era, and Border argued that Ponting would end up as Australia’s second best-ever batsman, behind Donald Bradman. He didn’t have a great time of it in England last time, but his performances overall have been very good, he said.

While praising Shane Warne as one of the best ever bowlers he has played with, Border also said that Warne could have made a very good Australia captain.

“At times when I captained him I probably over-bowled him. He was just so compelling at the crease and it was so hard to take him off because he always looked like he’d take a wicket,” he said. (ANI)

Hussey hopes selectors remember him when choosing Ashes squad

Cape Town (South Africa), Mar.25 (ANI): Australian middle order batsman Michael Hussey is hoping that the selectors will not cast him aside for the upcoming Ashes series because of his current poor form.

Hussey’s disappointing performances across the entire summer, at home and in South Africa, have left room for questions about whether he remains an automatic choice.

Hussey has averaged a tick under 20 in the six matches against South Africa (23 if you include the two against New Zealand at the start of the summer) and hasn’t made a century for 22 innings, but he has a couple of things in his favour.

He showed signs of coming good on the last day, fighting hard for 39.

The competition for his spot is not overwhelming.

And history tells you selectors are loath to sack good players – his average is still 55.29. just a tick under Ponting’s 56.20 – too hastily.

Greg Chappell and Mark Taylor are two who survived horror stretches as bad as Hussey’s.

But there will need to be a contingency plan, which suggests the selectors might want to take the current top six and two reserves.

Prolific Victoria opener Chris Rogers should be one, with South Australia’s Callum Ferguson and Michael Klinger, Hussey’s brother David, and the luckless Shane Watson probably the contenders.

Johnson’s explosive but classy maiden century has done himself and everyone else, including the captain and the selectors, a favour.

It has confirmed that he is a genuine all-rounder and can slot in comfortably below keeper Brad Haddin.

More importantly, perhaps, it allows for an extra strike bowler to play – Lee perhaps – and to lessen Johnson’s workload.

Johnson was looking tired in Cape Town and no wonder – he has bowled 300 overs in six matches against South Africa, or 50 apiece.

That’s a significant jump from the 39 he was averaging over his first 15 matches.

Ponting possibly aside, Johnson is now the most important, influential – and talented – figure in the team, and its only truly intimidating bowler. (ANI)

Ex-Oz skipper Taylor believes Punter’s team is favourite to win Ashes

Sydney, Mar.12 (ANI): Australia’s series defeat of South Africa on the latter’s home turf, has convinced former skipper Mark Taylor that Ponting’s boys will start as favourites for this year’s Ashes series.

Taylor also said that ageing stars such as Brett Lee, Stuart Clark and Andrew Symonds would have a tough time breaking back into a revitalized Test line-up.
“It just shows the value of going with young players,” Fox Sports quoted Taylor, as saying after Australia’s 175-run victory in the second Test at Durban.

“This is an ideal situation for Australian cricket because the older blokes have to try to push the younger blokes out and that’s not going to be easy,” Taylor said.

“The selectors have some tough choices to make, but I can’t see them making too many changes. Brett Lee has played no cricket at all and Stuart Clark has just come back in grade cricket.

“Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus have been terrific and Doug Bollinger was good in his only Test (in Sydney) so if Stuart Clark and Brett Lee do come back the selectors are going to have quite a few quicks to choose from.”
Taylor’s former vice-captain Ian Healy claimed Clark and Lee had credits for their past performance, but had to find fitness and form after long lay-offs from injury before they could be considered again.

“They’ve got some good bowling to do to prove themselves,” Healy said.

However, given the hectic schedule and injury record of the team recently, he said Australia had to ensure all its fast bowlers were fit and firing.

“We’re going to need them all,” he said.

Healy also believes Symonds is struggling.

“He’s not in form. We’ve got to be a bit patient with Symonds and see how he goes in the Sheffield Shield final and maybe the IPL. He’s got a bit of ground to make up,” said Healy.
Healy said Marcus North can make number six in the batting order his own if he can become more consistent than Symonds in that position.

He said the two centuries Symonds had made in 41 innings in 26 Tests was not enough.

Taylor and Healy were both excited about the impressive nature of Australia’s victories, giving it three in a row after the win in Sydney and redressing the balance of South Africa’s 2-1 win in Australia in the summer.

Phillip Hughes, 20, has made a spectacular start in place of the retired Matthew Hayden, scoring two centuries in the just-completed second Test.

Johnson, with 12 wickets at 21, and Siddle, with 11 wickets at 18, have been the stand-out bowlers in the series.

Taylor compared this series victory with Australia’s 1995 triumph in the West Indies, when the visitors became unofficial world Test champion.

In that series he went in with an untried pace attack of Glenn McGrath, Paul Reiffel and Brendon Julian after opening bowlers Craig McDermott and Damien Fleming were ruled out with injury.

This time Australia’s young bowling brigade ensured it would retain the now official ranking as the leading Test nation.

Healy felt the euphoria was more like Australia’s unexpected Ashes victory in 1989.

“It’s the start of a new cycle. Our last cricket cycle was 20 years, maybe a bit less by the time it took us to build up. Now I reckon this (series win) is extremely exciting,” said Healy.(ANI)

Hughes should have been picked up earlier: Bill Lawry

Melbourne, Mar.9 (ANI): Former Australian captain Bill Lawry believes current opener Phillip Hughes should have been picked earlier than he was, claiming he was held back because of a selection process that required overhauling.

“The success of Hughes is a wake-up call to our selection panel that you don’t need to be 30 before you play for Australia,” Lawry, a left-hand opener himself, was quoted by the Herald Sun, as saying today

“Mark Taylor told me 12 months ago that Hughes was something special and really he should have at least been picked when South Africa were here in the summer. He has come into the team in peak form and like most kids has no fear of failure. Who knows what he will end up achieving?”

Lawry scored 5234 runs at 47.14 in 67 Tests between 1961-71. (ANI)

Oz selector Boon calls for patience

Johannesburg, Feb.25 (ANI): Australian cricket selector David Boon has called on fans and critics to be patient about team selection and performance a day before they take on South Africa in the first Test at the Wanderer’s here.

Commenting on main selection issues, Boon said that as far the Wanderer’s was concerned, it “has “essentially been a seamers’ wicket.”

“Spinners can have a role, but they don’t appear to have had a massive impact in Test matches here. In the past five Tests here, spinners have only taken 10 wickets and three of (the spinners) were Shane Warne, Daniel Vettori and Anil Kumble,” he added.

He also said that pace bowlers Doug Bollinger and Ben Hilfenhaus bowled well in parts.

“I suppose, in a way, we’ve probably got a choice to make there. It’s not going to be an easy one,” Fox Sports quoted Boon, as saying.

Hinting at the possibility of all-rounder Marcus North getting a look in, Boon said: “He’s handy and worked for a number of years on getting another string to his bow. He’s shown a lot of younger cricketers that you’ve got to be good at something else. Marcus has done that as an off-spinner.”

As far as the state of Australian cricket was concerned, Boon said: ” History says the wheel turns. It’s absolute cycles. We’ve seen it with the West Indies and we’ve seen it with England, but I think Australia is in a far stronger position and has a greater base for us to restrict the downward cycle.”

“It’s nothing like we experienced in the early ’80s, nowhere near the extent of that, but I still think we’ve just got to be patient,” he said.

“The selectors back then were fantastic. When we went through that period they said, ‘Right, we can’t keep chopping and changing’.

They basically picked 16 or 18 guys and had them in their minds and for the next three or four years, we all played and we knew if we missed out, we weren’t going to be flicked. I think it built everything really well.

Through that, it gave Billy (Craig McDermott), the chance to improve as a young 19-year-old bowler. Steve Waugh was very up and down through those formative years but they stuck with him because everybody knew there was talent there.

We tried a couple of different combinations. I opened and then went back to three when Tubby (Mark Taylor) came in. We stuck together and I think we’re going to do the same here,” the former Australian player said. (ANI)

Spinner McGain could make the difference, says Ponting on arrival in S. Africa

Johannesburg (South Africa), Feb. 17 (ANI): Australian cricket skipper Ricky Ponting believes that leg-spinner Bryce McGain could make the difference between Australia winning or losing the forthcoming series to South Africa.

“He’s obviously come back from his injury very well and he’s bowled well for Victoria in the last few games. It’s always nice to have a very good and highly skilled leg-spinner in your side, which is what Bryce is. There’s every chance that he could just be that X-factor that we need,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Ponting, as saying.

“We know that over the years Warnie had a great record against South Africa, and at different times had them under a spell,” he added.

Ponting said that he was delighted with McGain’s selection in the 14-man squad because, amongst other things, it means that he is no longer the oldest player on tour, something he volunteers with a smile.

He compared the daunting task of his inexperienced South Africa touring squad to Australia’s history-changing tour of the West Indies in 1995.

Australia beat the West Indies despite a decimated attack to claim the unofficial title of world champion and has held that title virtually ever since, until challenged by South Africa this summer.

Now rankings are official Australia, having lost 2-1 to South Africa this summer, will be battling to retain its No.1 Test status during the next month or so in the return series.

Ponting will be mounting his defence without new ball bowlers Brett Lee and Stuart Clark, amongst others, in the same way Mark Taylor lost his opening pair of Craig McDermott and Damien Fleming through injury 13 years ago.

“If you look back to a tour like the West Indies in 1995, that’s where Glenn McGrath really stood up and made a name for himself when Craig McDermott and a few of the guys went down injured. We’ve got a great opportunity for a Siddle, or a Ben Hilfenhaus or a Bollinger to really make a name for themselves and forge their own identity at international level,” Ponting said.

A tireless Johnson, who has all of 18 Tests behind him and has played half of that quota over the past four months in India and at home to be Australia’s standout bowler of the summer, will lead the attack. Siddle has played just four Tests, Bollinger one and Hilfenhaus is yet to make his debut.

Also yet to play his first Test is leg-spinner Bryce McGain, who turns 37 next month but is likely to be Australia’s main spinner after making a strong recovery from shoulder surgery. (ANI)

Waugh, Taylor to lead teams in Victoria bush fire T20 fundraiser

Sydney, Feb. 15 (ANI): Former Australian captains Steve Waugh and Mark Taylor will lead their celebrity teams in a fundraiser Twenty20 cricket match to gather aid for Victorian bushfire victims.

Waugh and Taylor immediately agreed to play when the proposal of the match was put before them, said David Gilbert, Cricket NSW chief executive.

“They said yes straight away. Once again, they are leading the way, just as they did in their playing days, and the response from players, past and present, plus the personalities has been fantastic,” Gilbert stated.

Australia’s Big Bash will be played next Sunday at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) that will also feature federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett, boxer Anthony Mundine and former Test stars Glenn McGrath and Michael Slater, News.com reports.

The former Midnight Oil frontman’s great grandfather, Tom Garrett was an Australian Test team player from 1877 to 1888.

Teams for the Big Bash are yet to be finalized, but David Warner, Nathan Bracken, Moises Henriques, Lisa Sthelaker and Ellyse Perry from the current Australian squad will also feature in the match.

Sydney Roosters NRL players Braith Anasta and Anthony Minichiello, Waratah players Phil Waugh, Lote Tuqiri and the retired Matthew Burke will also play.

Sydney Swans forward Barry Hall has agreed to play, singer Shannon Noll, former world surfing champion Mick Fanning and current surfer Joel Parkinson are the celebrities who will also feature in the fundraiser match.

Organisers hope the Twenty20 match will raise 500,000 dollars for the Red Cross Victorian Bushfire Appeal, with SCG staff donating their services. (ANI)

Haydos retirement will provoke relief among bowlers: Roebuck

Melbourne, Jan.14 (ANI): Cricket commentator Peter Roebuck is of the view that Matthew Hayden’s decision to retire from all forms of the game will provoke relief among long-suffering bowlers.

He further goes on to say that in some eyes, Hayden was the epitome of hard-nosed Australia, a label he seemed happy to wear. However, closer inspection revealed a warmer nature.

“Among comrades he commanded affection; opponents felt only fear and, occasionally, resentment. Hayden started later than his contemporaries and wanted to last longer. Strong of mind and body, he hoped to play another Ashes series this year, to score a few more hundreds, to end in a blaze. It was not to be,” says Roebuck in his article for The Age.

Throughout 2008, he looked out of sorts, a player past his time searching for his path. It all happened so quickly.

“In 2007-08, he was the powerhouse of the batting. A year later, he seemed too old for the company he was keeping. Naturally, he waited for another revival, but this time the root cause was not technical but mental. His mind was telling him it was over,” says Roebuck.

He says that Hayden’s contribution to Australia and world cricket has been nothing short of extraordinary, especially when it has to be considered that he was patronised in his early years, and had several false starts as he tried to adjust his game to Test cricket.

“A secretly sensitive man, he felt uncomfortable in the teams led by Mark Taylor and, accordingly, tried to make the right impression. Of course, it did not work. Every man has his voice, distance, pace and role. Not until Steve Waugh took charge did confidence return,” says Roebuck.

“Waugh believed in him, and so Hayden became himself. Ponting had faith in him, too, and retained it through his loss of form in the 2005 Ashes series. Both captains were well rewarded,” he adds. (ANI)

`I played the game for respect,’ says Hayden

Brisbane, Jan.18 (ANI): Just retired Australian cricket opener Mathew Hayden has said that he played the game to earn respect.

After a career filled with runs, runs and more runs at the top of Australia’s order, Hayden told the Sydney Morning Herald in an interview that when he took the decision to quit, he was extremely nervous about conveying it to his team mates, especially skipper Ricky Ponting.

Describing Ponting as a great person and leader, Hayden said: “He (Ponting) was great. He was like, ‘I suppose I’m not changing your mind?’ I said, ‘What do you reckon? No.’ He said he was really surprised. I was nervous about telling him because I knew the magnitude of my conversation with him.”

“One of the things I’ve genuinely loved doing is playing with Ricky over the years. Just playing for his captaincy and his legacy. If he asked me to do something, I would do it, without doubting it for one second. I have so much respect for him that I apologized for leaving him. I asked him for one thing. I said, ‘I’d love to have you at the press conference.’ He said, ‘Done. Of course I’m there.’ But he went a step further and got the entire team there.”

“That was one of the greatest highlights of my cricketing life to have the whole team there when I announced my retirement. And it was Ricky’s doing. That’s what I played the game for – respect,” Hayden said.

He also said that Ponting was not overtly worried about the criticism coming his way.

“No. He just knows so well who he is. He knows what he is about and he is going to stick to it. He’s brilliant. Hasn’t he copped some crap? What a joke. I’ve been lucky in that I’ve played under some great captains. Mark Taylor, Steve Waugh, Ricky, Stuart Law at Queensland. They’re as brilliant as each other. I think I know what leadership is about, and Ricky is as good a leader as I’ve seen,” said Hayden.

As far as his favourite moment was, he said it was singing the team song on top of Table Mountain in Cape Town.

“The sun was setting, we’d had a great afternoon in the change rooms, the whole place was closed, but the owner had given us special permission to go up there at night. To me, singing the team song was the ultimate, and that was the ultimate time and place. It was about the mateships, and the innings that define your mateships,” said Hayden. (ANI)

Clarke maintains form in the face of personal anguish

Melbourne, Jan 11 (ANI): Australian cricketer Michael Clarke has had the best summer of his career, but he has been playing under the cloud of family anguish and concern for the people he loves most.

“The great thing is he’s still smiling, still loving life. That’s why I got so emotional the other day when I got that hundred (at the SCG). Just how positive dad has been has given me strength.” The Daily Telegraph quoted Clarke, as saying.

He worries about father Les, whose cancer battle has now reached 627 days. He worries about fiancee Lara Bingle, and how she is coping with the loss of her own father to cancer last May.

As Clarke ponders the impact of making himself available for the IPL auction next month, aware of the void he may leave at home, it’s clear how much Australia’s vice-captain has grown as a man and as a cricketer.

“Dad’s going OK,” Clarke says. “He’s got another scan in February, so I’ve got my fingers crossed, I’m just hoping it comes back clear. It’s curable, it’s just a matter of where the tumours are and hopefully the chemo and the radiation treatment has got rid of them,” he said.

The shaven-headed 27-year-old has found more steel and substance, enabling him to amass 1063 Test runs at 50.62 in 2008 — smashing his previous best of 596 runs in a calendar year, the paper said.

He had many reasons to crack in 2008. That he didn’t, that he became stronger, tougher, more resolute, more assured, more determined and more dependable only underlines his leadership credentials.

Last May, just six weeks after Clarke proposed to Bingle in New York’s Central Park, Graham Bingle lost his battle with liver and pancreatic cancer.

Clarke insists he is happy to bide his time as Ricky Ponting’s deputy, although he has picked the brains of former Test skippers Mark Taylor, Ian Chappell and Steve Waugh.

But the career-shaping chats have been with Shane Warne, the Daily Telegraph said. (ANI)