Mercury (Hobart)

Putting to rest some of the recent turmoil

- ROBERT CRADDOCK Comment

IT’S taken almost two years since the Cape Town balltamper­ing scandal but Australia is at last at peace with its present and future.

No, it was not a perfect day at the Gabba but the Pakistani uprising was just the type of splash of cold water in the face every team needs.

Pakistan were full of adventure and we can now see why there is so much fuss over Babar Azam after he positively pounced on anything overpitche­d with eye-watering drives and smoked the short ball on both sides of the wicket.

It proved to Australia that as great as their bowlers are they are not immune from being ambushed on a flat wicket and a hot day no matter how historical­ly friendly the venue.

But for all the cheek and conjure of Pakistan, the horse had bolted and the game gone.

Even in England where it won the Ashes, there was a sense of restlessne­ss about an Australian team which was still in a delicate stage of transition.

Was Cameron Bancroft much chop? Was Marcus Harris the genuine Test-match article? Was David Warner a light of other days? And what of the pecking order of the fast men?

Hot questions sizzled throughout the summer.

Suddenly everything seems settled. The serenity of course, won’t last. It never does.

It would only take a Kiwi uprising over Christmas to change things but there is something satisfying for the home side to at least to be able to draw breath and feel that its current XI is its best XI.

It is a rare and precious place to be. After 11 opening partnershi­ps in its past 29 Tests, Australia can ink Burns and David Warner in for the summer.

After 16 No.3 batsmen since Ricky Ponting, Marnus Labuschagn­e looks a striking long-term option.

Batting careers, however, are not the things you want to be making big statements about.

At various stages Usman Khawaja, Shaun Marsh, Bancroft and many others were labelled men with exceptiona­l futures yet somehow fell short of what they were expected to be.

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