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News

Johnson vows more sustained hostility

Mitchell Johnson is hoping to return to the aggression that saw him bounce out Jonny Bairstow and Ben Stokes at Edgbaston

Daniel Brettig
Daniel Brettig
04-Aug-2015
Mitchell Johnson will aim for a repeat of his over early on the second day at Edgbaston  •  Getty Images

Mitchell Johnson will aim for a repeat of his over early on the second day at Edgbaston  •  Getty Images

For a few tantalising minutes, Mitchell Johnson once again had England by the unmentionables. Jonny Bairstow and Ben Stokes had been bounced out in the space of three balls, and the hosts' tail-enders quaked in their Edgbaston rooms as they scurried around, out of sight of the cameras, for protective gear. England led on the scoreboard, but not between the ears.
Had this been 2013-14, the unbridled aggression briefly glimpsed would have been allowed to bloom. Johnson would have continued sending down his bombs, the English tail would have been razed, and doubtless Brad Haddin would have done his merry batting dance once more. But it is now 2015, and at the other end to Johnson are Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazewood rather than Ryan Harris and Peter Siddle.
Johnson cannot quite put his finger on why he did not follow up with further hostile short stuff, but the matter of runs leaking at the other end has crossed his mind. So too does the fact that in a Test series that has already spanned the length of most encounters between nations, it is those two balls to Bairstow and Stokes that have generated most discussion. Next time around, he is unlikely to hold anything back.
"I don't know. I guess from my point of view I was just trying to really dry up the runs and I probably just lost that bit of aggression," Johnson said. "I don't read into it too much to be honest. But I think because the ball has been swinging over here a lot more, I feel like I'm trying to get the ball up there a lot more often anyway. I feel like I've bowled a lot fuller this trip. I've been really happy with the way I've bowled, generally.
"There's been a few spells here and there. I probably didn't start too well last Test match. You probably try a bit too hard when there's a small total there to defend. Generally I feel like I've bowled quite well throughout this tour. I've swung the ball consistently. At Lord's I felt like I used the short ball when it was time to use it. I feel like I've become a much smarter bowler and I feel like I've found a bit more consistency.
"Lord's is the only ground where I've had a real crack at it, and those two short balls. I actually had a few high-school friends Facebook message me about it, saying they've been replicating it at club training. So they were pretty excited about it. It's something I need to have a look at throughout this Test match and just keep that aggression. That's how I've been bowling and it's been working."
Johnson was certainly building up to an aggressive spell on the third and final day of the Birmingham Test. Granted only 120 runs to defend, he paced through his warm-ups with an intensity that suggested he was exceptionally eager to take the new ball for the first time in this series. Yet by the time Michael Clarke deigned to throw Johnson the ball, England needed only 74 more runs.
"I thought to myself I was really keen to get the new ball, but whatever is best for the team in those situation I'm happy with," Johnson said. "It's something that I've become better at is not to become frustrated in those situations where sometimes I feel like I might be better suited in a situation like that. But I have full trust in those guys, Starcy and Hazlewood, to do the job but I'm always prepared to bowl in any position, I think that's something that I've adapted very well to in my Test cricket now."
The equanimity with which Johnson waited for the ball was matched later on when he responded in good humour to the most sustained and intense baiting of the series thus far. Thousands as Edgbaston sang their mocking tune as he bowled, and as the game sailed beyond Australians' reach, he responded by jokingly stopping his run-up for one delivery, and then next time around delivering a ball to Joe Root from parallel to the umpire.
"I get amongst it a bit more now," he said. "I definitely take it as a bit of a compliment now and when the whole crowd is cheering my name at the end of a game when they've just won you have to take that as a compliment. It's a pretty special crowd, they were really loud there and I expected that from past experiences, they really do get vocal and they really enjoy their cricket.
"That over where I did stop in my run-up was deliberate to try and have a bit of fun with the crowd and apparently it had a fair bit of appreciation when I went down to fine leg with people clapping and saying a few choice words. But it was all in good fun. I was just playing it up a bit with the crowd as well, but at the same time respecting the game."
Playing up to the crowd is less likely to be on Johnson's agenda this week, as he charges at England's batsmen in what is most likely the last chance more than half this squad will get to win an Ashes series on these shores. The tourists are not wallowing in the problems exposed at Edgbaston, knowing that self-recriminating thoughts do no-one any good right now. But they know they have to get things right this time.
"Cardiff, the way we played, then we played so well at Lord's then we played in Birmingham and did what we did there. I just think our consistency as a whole has just been off," Johnson said. "I didn't think we bowled particularly well up front in Birmingham, I think we could have done a lot better with the newer ball. It was a bit like Cardiff, we didn't play our cricket in partnerships, batting and bowling.
"The way we've been playing Test cricket for the last 12-18 months has been really good. It has been that consistent cricket. But we are over in these conditions, it's an Ashes series and we've got some guys that are probably feeling the pressure a little bit. I know what it's like when you first come over and experience it, so I think the guys have handled it really well.
"Especially a loss like we had in the last Test, I think we've all handed it really well. We were disappointed as a team and a group, but we were able to move on and the guys are - we left a day early to get here and train, get used to the conditions. I think that's what we have done really well, we've been able to move on from losses like that. Hopefully learn from them and hopefully we can come out here and win this Test match, because if we don't we are in big trouble."
More trouble, even, than Bairstow and Stokes.

Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @danbrettig