Border criticises Australia batsmen

Update: 2013-07-23 23:32 GMT

Allan Border, the tough Australian who helped transform the fortunes of the national side in the 1980s, said he would have been embarrassed to be one of the top three batsmen of the current team after their humiliation at Lord’s on Sunday.
‘I could honestly say the nine, 10 and jack (number 11) looked more competent than our one, two and three. If that was me in the top three, I’d be embarrassed,’ Border wrote to Cricket Australia’s subscribers as he delivered a brutally honest assessment.

Border further said Australia needed to give players a chance to prove themselves rather than experimenting with a new line-up at every Test. ‘We need to settle on our best 11 and stay with it. I’m a believer in the pick-and-stick method, so we need to find our best 11 that’s suited to the conditions,’ he said.

Australia nearly snatched an upset victory in the first Test at Trent Bridge with two heroic last-wicket stands. On Sunday the last wicket pair of James Pattinson and Ryan Harris almost took the match into a fifth day and more than 30 percent of Australia’s runs in the series have come from the last wicket pair.

Border also joined the growing band of critics who are questioning Shane Watson, the talented all-rounder who consistently fails to deliver in test cricket. Watson made his usual good start opening the batting at Lord’s but fell lbw for 30 and 20.

‘We all know what a wonderful player Shane Watson is. He looks like a million bucks when he’s firing. What is worrying though is that he keeps getting out in the same fashion. Now who is to blame here? Is it Watson for not adapting? What about the coaches?

MOCKING LAUGHTER

Mocking laughter from spectators greeted Michael Clarke’s insistence at the victory ceremony that Australia could come back from the dead to win the series 3-2 and regain the Ashes.

‘We’ve got plenty of experience in our top seven, we’ve seen already in this series that guys can score runs against this attack. Our shot selection was poor and we just didn’t have the discipline that England had. England were willing to bat for long periods and graft through the tough times - and we certainly weren’t in that first innings,’ he said.

Australia now have a few days to regroup before the third Test starts on August 1.

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