The Gold Coast Bulletin

THE ART OF GETTING OVER A LOSS

Lessons of Headingley have helped us regroup

- TIM PAINE AUSTRALIAN CAPTAIN

MARNUS Labuschagn­e, Steve Smith and I were dining at the team hotel after arriving in Sydney.

Whenever the three of us get together, talk always turns to cricket and tactics. We’ve had a few chats among ourselves since the Melbourne Test and most of them were about our plans for the SCG.

The three of us went down for a net session the next day on what would have been the fifth day at the MCG.

We worked on tactics for handling Ravi Ashwin, on how to score when he bowls that leg-stump line and packs the leg-side field.

A lot of talk goes on among the group between games about bowlers, the field placements and things we can do better.

We’ve got a lot better at sharing each other’s plans and that makes it easy in the middle when batting. If I know what Marnus or Smithy or whoever else I’m batting with is trying to do to a certain bloke then I can feed into that strategy on the spot.

Most of you have probably seen The Test and how we handled the loss at Headingley.

In that instance I looked around the room and everybody was devastated about losing a game we should have won and I knew I had to get on top of that.

I gathered my thoughts in the shower, said a few things and told everybody we had to move on. The next morning we went over the game again, which was a brave thing to do, had breakfast and started planning for the next match.

My job is to read the room and it was a very different situation in Melbourne. We were disappoint­ed but not devastated.

I had a lot to do after the game. There were captains meetings and we got fined for slow over rates, so I had to be a part of that before joining the boys.

When I got back we all just sat around and had a beer, wound down and maybe 30 minutes in we had a chat about what had taken place.

Sometimes after you have played poorly it’s not a bad thing to have time to sit and reflect as individual­s and then bring it all together.

The conversati­ons have to be had, you can’t ignore the things you do badly. We spoke about plans to the Indians, how we can score more runs against them, do we think our bowling plans are working, can we improve even our bowling performanc­es, what are we seeing. Everyone contribute­s, it is a very open conversati­on.

It’s not a complicate­d game. Sometimes you can sit around and look for things, but we just need to bat better for longer. We’ve allowed them to build pressure on us and we haven’t found a way to get through it. From there you have informal chats

We were disappoint­ed but more so with the way we played. But I reiterated that we have world-class players in this team and I have full confidence that it will come good.

We’re working hard and have responded well to a loss before, as you saw with Headingley. We know how to handle those situations and from that moment everyone has been really keen to get to Sydney and prepare for the next game.

As I’ve said for the past 12 months, good teams look forward, poor ones look backward.

You leave a loss there in the dressing room.

Our fielding was not up to scratch, but that can happen.

It happened to India in the first Test.

In Melbourne it felt a little like the mistakes gained a bit of momentum. You drop one, you drop two. Sport is one of those funny things. It’s the same when you watch the footy. A team kicks three behinds then misses another one and everyone starts thinking about it and you get a bit tight and drop or miss a few more. You want it so badly, you want to be winning and maybe you try too hard.

I think we tried too hard.

Sometimes you just have to play the game.

When you try too hard you are in a bit of a rush rather than slowing down and winning parts of the game. If you string together small wins, all of a sudden you win a session, then you win the day and maybe another day, but it starts with focusing on the moment.

You don’t bowl Test teams out for 36 too often. We were just in a bit of a hurry at the start and let them take control, but it was more through

our mistakes than their brilliance. They batted and bowled well enough, but if we eliminate our errors we would be in a different position.

Now we are in Sydney and Davey Warner is back. He brings so much with him.

I love having him around, he brings a different intensity, a different energy and he breeds confidence. He makes others walk taller. He made an immediate impact on our group with his energy, his intensity. We feed off that.

Sean Abbott is another one who joined us after being locked out, another one who has performed extremely well in domestic cricket and deserves his opportunit­y.

To have younger guys like him and Will Pucovski around is great.

Tim Paine (capt), Pat Cummins (vc), Sean Abbott, Cameron Green, Josh Hazlewood, Marcus Harris, Travis Head, Moises Henriques, Marnus Labuschagn­e, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, James Pattinson, Will Pucovski, Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, Mitchell Swepson, Matthew Wade, David Warner

They are so excited that it becomes infectious for the rest us. You can feed off that younger generation and those two certainly bring that.

Sean has some very good skills with the ball, his batting’s improved, and he has a first-class hundred this year.

When you watch Puc bat in the nets you just think “wow, he is a super player”, so we are excited to have him back in the mix and looking forward to what the future holds for him.

The SCG Test is an opportunit­y and one we’re looking forward to.

It’s great that there will be a crowd, even a limited crowd. It’s great to be in the middle of an intense series and we are just so lucky to be playing cricket at all.

Whenyouwat­chPucbat in the nets y ou just think ‘wow, he is a sup er player’

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 ??  ?? Steve Smith during a game of football on the SCG; (left) Justin Langer and Tim Paine; (far left) Marnus Labuschagn­e and (below) Matt Wade. Pictures: AFP, Getty
Steve Smith during a game of football on the SCG; (left) Justin Langer and Tim Paine; (far left) Marnus Labuschagn­e and (below) Matt Wade. Pictures: AFP, Getty

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