Ashes Lacks Spin Magic, Says Atherton, Making Cricket One-Dimensional

Former England captain Michael Atherton has criticized the ongoing Ashes series for becoming "one-dimensional" due to a severe lack of spin bowling. He attributes this to pitches favoring seamers and the absence of frontline spinners, with England not selecting one and Australia losing Nathan Lyon to injury. Atherton laments that even traditionally spin-friendly grounds like Sydney are becoming more uniform, reducing the variety crucial for a five-Test series. Meanwhile, ex-captain Nasser Hussain offered a counterpoint, suggesting captains are prioritizing seamers for later in the match when heat-induced cracks may open.

Key Points: Atherton: Lack of Spin Makes Ashes Cricket One-Dimensional

  • England omitted a specialist spinner
  • Australia lost Nathan Lyon to injury
  • Pitches favor fast bowlers too heavily
  • Sydney's spin-friendly reputation fading
2 min read

Ashes: Lack of spin bowling has made cricket in this series one-dimensional, says Atherton

Former England captain Michael Atherton criticizes the Ashes pitches and team selections for creating one-dimensional, spin-starved cricket.

Ashes: Lack of spin bowling has made cricket in this series one-dimensional, says Atherton
"It means the cricket we have seen in this series has been a bit one-dimensional. - Michael Atherton"

Sydney, Jan 4

Former England captain Michael Atherton believes the ongoing Ashes series has become "one-dimensional" due to the lack of spin bowling caused by pitches being more in favour of fast bowlers.

England did not select a specialist spinner for any of the five matches, with off-spinner Shoaib Bashir overlooked, while Will Jacks bowled occasional off-spin but was not considered a frontline option.

Australia, meanwhile, named Nathan Lyon for the first and third Tests but omitted the veteran off-spinner from the day-night fixture in Brisbane before losing him to a hamstring injury sustained during their series-clinching victory in Adelaide. The hosts opted against replacing Lyon with fellow off-spinner Todd Murphy in both Melbourne and Sydney Tests.

"It means the cricket we have seen in this series has been a bit one-dimensional. Looking at the pitch (on day one in Sydney), you wouldn't say it offered enough for five seamers but that is not to say it is going to turn on the last day either. We will have to wait and see.

"(Not picking a spinner) may be a reflection on Murphy - if Lyon had been fit, I imagine he might have played. Murphy is not a bad bowler but he is no Lyon. Pitches have become more uniform and less varied, partly because of the drop-ins at the multi-sport grounds like Brisbane and Adelaide.

"Sydney used to be the outlier in terms of spin and if that's gone the way of the other grounds in terms of more grass left on there is a lack of variety and that is not necessarily a good thing for the game. What you want to see in a five-Test series is the whole range of skills," said Atherton on Sky Sports' Cricket Podcast.

Ex-England captain Nasser Hussain expressed a different perspective. "I think you have to be careful. The forecast is to be hot and you have to pick a side for the last day as well as the first day. However, I think both captains feel that with the heat the cracks will open up and that's when you want your seamers."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As a neutral fan, it's been a bit boring. The pitches are too similar. Where is the challenge for the batsmen? In India, every ground has a different character. That's what makes a series exciting.
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Rohit P
Honestly, I disagree a bit with Atherton. If the pitch is green, you pick your best bowlers for those conditions. England didn't have a world-class spinner anyway. Hussain's point about heat and cracks for seamers makes sense. Not every series needs to be a spin fest.
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Priyanka N
It shows how much Australia relies on Nathan Lyon. Without him, they had no confidence in Murphy. Meanwhile, in India, we have multiple quality spinners ready to step up. Depth matters! 🇮🇳
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David E
The drop-in pitch argument is interesting. Stadiums built for multiple sports are killing the unique character of cricket grounds. Sydney was the last holdout for spin in Australia. If that's gone, it's a real loss for the global game.
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Anjali F
As an Indian cricket lover, I feel this debate is very one-sided. Yes, spin adds flavour, but fast bowling has its own thrill! Maybe the issue is not the lack of spin, but the lack of *attempt* to play it. Both teams seemed scared to try something different. 🤷‍♀️

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