Smith out to re-open England’s Ashes ‘scars’

Australian skipper Steve Smith says Australia plans to reopen old English Ashes scars with the Ashes series opener at the Gabba this month.

Published : Nov 02, 2017 15:19 IST , Sydney

“The first Test match is going to be really important, we need to set the tone again and hopefully get them on a similar path to what we did in 2013,” said Steve Smith ahead of the first Test on November 23 in Brisbane.
“The first Test match is going to be really important, we need to set the tone again and hopefully get them on a similar path to what we did in 2013,” said Steve Smith ahead of the first Test on November 23 in Brisbane.
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“The first Test match is going to be really important, we need to set the tone again and hopefully get them on a similar path to what we did in 2013,” said Steve Smith ahead of the first Test on November 23 in Brisbane.

Skipper Steve Smith says Australia plans to reopen old English Ashes scars starting with a morale-shattering blow in the series opener at the Gabba this month.

Smith has indelible memories of the shattering effect of the opening Brisbane Test from the last 2013-14 Ashes battle in Australia on the remainder of that series.

England was battered by the hostility of paceman Mitchell Johnson, backed up by Ryan Harris and Peter Siddle and the resilience of Australia’s lower batting order.

READ: Siddle still dreaming of Aussie recall as Ashes looms

Smith said he wants those in the England’s squad who played in that series — captain Joe Root, Alastair Cook, Jonny Bairstow, James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Steven Finn — to relive the nightmare and for it to permeate through to the rest of the team.

“First Test match is going to be really important, we need to set the tone again and hopefully get them on a similar path to what we did in 2013,” he told ESPNcricinfo website on Thursday, ahead of the first Test on November 23 in Brisbane.

“A few players were out here for that tour, and hopefully we can get them thinking the same way, open a few of those scars up as such, get them thinking ‘oh not this again’ and that kind of thought process.”

He said he expected England coach Trevor Bayliss to ensure his team had an attacking frame of mind, and admitted Australia’s middle order needed to be more productive to be successful.

“We’ve had a lot of collapses in the last couple of years,” he said. “I think in our last 15 games we’ve had 14 collapses or something like that.

ALSO READ: Bayliss writes off Stokes for Ashes participation

“We can’t afford to do that this summer and (batting positions) six and seven are a place where we’ll need some rebuilding if those sorts of things happen and it’s going to be a valuable spot if guys there are getting runs for us.

“It’ll make a big difference, so let’s hope that is the case.”

Smith, who has not scored an international century since his prolific tour of India in March, said he was refreshed and hopeful of returning to his best form for the five-Test clash with England.

The skipper is the top-ranked Test batsman ahead of Root and heads into the Ashes with a batting average of 59.66 from 56 Tests with 20 centuries.

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