Corridor of uncertainty
The art of magic relies on a single trick.
Misdirection.
The only way the magician can make a person disappear from a cage or guess that your card is the King of Spades is to have their audience focus elsewhere while it is all happening. Illusion is nothing more than you looking in the wrong place at the right time.
The Australian Test team are currently the David Copperfield of cricket. While you looked left, Australian cricket was collapsing over to the right. Last September, by the time you realised what was happening, Pakistan had leapfrogged everyone to become number one in the world. Meanwhile, Australia was returning from Sri Lanka with the public somewhat confused.
Not only had the misdirection technique caught out their fans, it had caught out themselves.
Both Australia and Pakistan were ranked the Number One Test side in the world in 2016. But as they gear up to clash from mid-December, the bizarre implosion of Australia has been matched by Pakistan’s downward spiral in New Zealand
One of the quirks of Australian cricket culture is that unless it is The Ashes, the general public takes little notice of the team’s overseas performances. Even an Indian series fails to capture the imagination. The reasons are quite simple to explain. Firstly, most away series happen during the Australian winter. At this time, Australian Rules Football and Rugby League dominate free-to-air television. They own the sports pages of the newspapers and the hearts of the nation.
Secondly, away cricket series usually only appear behind the paywall of subscription TV, and almost never can be heard on the radio. Less than 35per cent of Australia have pay TV and it would be unreasonable to suggest that all of them have it to watch Australia play cricket.
So when the world’s number one Test team finished up its three-Test series in Colombo in August this year, the 3-0 scoreline we got was diametrically opposed to the one we all expected. But hardly anyone in Australia saw it or even knew that it happened.
They missed the weird battle for number six between Mitch Marsh and Moises Henriques. The one that guaranteed that a bowling all-rounder as a concept is now dead for a long, long time.
They missed the struggles of the batsmen against debut off spinners and cagey old left-arm spinners. They missed the fact that Australia had bowled out Sri Lanka for 117 in the first innings of the series and all was right in the world. They missed the batting collapses. They missed the bizarre debut of Jon Holland, a bloke who had played two first class games in two years prior to that point.
Only two Australian batsmen averaged over 28 in that series. Only two Australian bowlers averaged under 30. These are not the statistics of success. The pitches were not raging turners, nor did the ball consistently stay low. Rather, Australia had no idea that the slow straight ball could be so dangerous. They kept getting out to it. They didn’t bowl enough of it.
But most importantly, they missed the usually stoic Australian team culture beginning to crack. Usman Khawaja and Joe Burns were dropped for the third Test. Khawaja publicly challenged the selectors by saying he was being made a “scapegoat.” Murmurs suggested that the relationship between skipper Smith and the selectors was touchy. He wasn’t getting the players he wanted or the support he needed.
The squad would leave Sri Lanka for a five match ODI series in South Africa. Starc was injured and Hazlewood was rested. Australia sent a second-rate squad including a bloke named Worrell who was once convicted of engraving a penis into a pitch.
The kick-off match was a single ODI against Ireland. Khawaja top scored. He was then subsequently dropped for the whole five match South Africa series. The same five-match series where Australia was whitewashed. Never before had they lost an ODI series 5-0. Apart from stalwarts Smith and Warner, no one averaged over 30 with the bat over the matches. Not one bowler averaged under 30. Some guy named Tremain recorded the worst ever Australian debut bowling figures. Some guy named Mennie recorded the second worst. They did it in the same game.
This result resonated back home. The football season had finished and the papers needed sports stories. Australian Chairman of Selectors Rod Marsh’s response was to nominate a retirement date of June 2017. He wouldn’t last that long. Australian cricket wouldn’t accept being held to ransom by an old, out-of-touch yesterday’s man.
Meanwhile, the South African tour bus pulled into Perth. It was without AB de Villiers. At 4/32 in their first innings, normality was restored. Say what you like about Australia overseas. But at home they are an unstoppable freight train.
The Proteas eked out 242 and then lost Dale Steyn to a broken shoulder after only his 12th over. No AB. No Dale. Playing away. This would get ugly. And it did. But not as it was meant to.
Australia went from 0/158 to 10/244. A monumental, yet typical batting collapse that we have seen all too often. They lost 10/86.When Duminy and Elgar helped South Africa put on 540 for the second innings, the violation was complete.
Rod Marsh said that the team would not change for the second Test. The Australian public went into meltdown. Rod Marsh relented.
The Mitch Marsh experiment ended with Callum Ferguson replacing him at number six. Squad member Jackson Bird was overlooked for debutante Joe Mennie, based on what Rod Marsh would claim was his “better batting at number 11.”Australian cricket selections had officially gone completely Pakistani. They made no sense.
Jackson Bird then went and played a Shield game, making 20 odd not out. His First Class batting average for the year to date is higher than Joe Burns, Ferguson, Moises, Neville and Joe Mennie.