England v Australia, the Oval, 2009
A dry, turning pitch, which Australia misread – and it cost them the Ashes. They omitted Nathan Hauritz, and watched Graeme Swann take eight wickets as England won 2-1.
England v Australia, the Oval, 2005
England wanted a surface that lacked menace. They led Australia 2-1 but were reeling at 199 for seven in the second innings. Kevin Pietersen and Ashley Giles exploited the benign conditions to see England to safety.
England v Australia, Trent Bridge, 2005
The Australians were livid that England were using some of the best fielders in the county game as 12th men, while their pacemen popped off for comfort breaks. It came to an ugly head when Gary Pratt ran out Ricky Ponting. He was furious.
England v West Indies, Leeds, 1991
Low, slow Headingley was a good ‘home banker’ when England needed a result, and it suited a seam-only attack of Phil DeFreitas, Steve Watkin and Derek Pringle in a 115-run win.
Meanwhile the Aussies have been told to up the sledging volume...
Ever since Allan Border told Robin Smith: “What do you think this is, a ------- tea party?” when the batsman asked if he could have a glass of water, sledging (or merntal disintegration, as Steve Waugh called it) has been a key part of Australia’s armoury.
But the head of their players’ union, Paul Marsh, swears blind that the national side lost their potency once they were told to tone it down after a particularly fractious Test against India at Sydney two years ago. Teams have exploited this “weakness”, Marsh says.
Judging by Mitchell Johnson’s behaviour at Perth, though, it seems the Aussies are finding their voice again. Thank XXXX for that.
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