West Indies in Australia 2009-10

Mitchell Johnson reveals Ashes demons

Alex Brown

November 23, 2009

Comments: 6 | Text size: A | A
Mitchell Johnson looks up to the heavens after suffering another hammering by England, England v Australia, 3rd Test, Edgbaston, 4th day, August 2, 2009
Mitchell Johnson was at a personal low during the Lord's Test © Getty Images
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Mitchell Johnson has spoken for the first time of the personal turmoil that led to his stunning meltdown during the Lord's Test. In a frank and revealing interview, Johnson - the ICC's player of the year - conceded that a tabloid spat between his mother and fiancee played on his mind throughout the match, culminating in a performance so awry as to convince him he would be demoted for the ensuing encounter at Edgbaston.

Johnson's match return of 3 for 200 from 38.4 overs in the second Test played a significant role in Australia's eventual 115-run defeat to England. At the time, team-mates and staff sought to play down the link between Johnson's delicate family situation and his errant bowling, however he has moved to set the record straight on the eve of this week's Test against West Indies.

"I'm probably going back on myself a little bit," Johnson said. "I said in the past that I'd blocked things out. I guess it started off with the personal side of things. That probably really did get to me. I was denying it at the time, and copping it from the crowd didn't help, but mentally I've probably learned to be a lot stronger and just concentrate on what I'm doing out in the middle. This is what I have to do for a living and I have to leave everything behind me when I'm out there.

"I think that I block things out pretty well normally. It was just the Ashes: the whole hype of it and the personal things that came out. It was mostly through Lord's where I felt that pressure. Obviously I was a little bit disappointed in some of the games I played in. I'm not always going to be at my best. I think I probably put a bit too much pressure on myself with how well I did in in South Africa. Coming into that series I probably relaxed a little bit as well."

Johnson flirted with the selectorial axe after Australia's shock defeat at Lord's, their first at the venue in 75 years. Stuart Clark's precision appeared the ideal alternative to Johnson's waywardness, but Andrew Hilditch's panel pulled a major surprise by instead dropping Phillip Hughes and installing the relatively untried Shane Watson at the top of the order.

The move to call-in an allrounder provided Ricky Ponting with insurance in the event of another Johnson blow-out, and underlined the lengths Australia's selectors were prepared to go to accommodate their fragile fast bowler. That unexpected show of faith, Johnson said, went far to restoring his confidence for the final three Tests of the Ashes series and beyond.

"I definitely thought I wasn't going to play the Edgbaston Test," he said. "I was quite nervous about it. I'm glad I got that opportunity again. You just can't take anything for granted. I am glad I got that opportunity because who knows, I could have been back playing state cricket, which might not have been a bad thing. I could have been working on different things with my bowling. I'm glad I've been given that chance. I don't know what the selectors were thinking, I don't know what Ricky was thinking, if they were going to drop me or not. Just in my mind, I just thought that was going to happen.

"For those guys to have that confidence in me just gave me confidence as well. It made me think a lot more positively about what my role was in the team, so it definitely helped. I had a lot more confidence in Egbaston and then Headingley. I think sometimes I think a bit negatively with my bowling, and it can get me in a bit of trouble, obviously."

 
 
I definitely thought I wasn't going to play the Edgbaston Test. I was quite nervous about it. I'm glad I got that opportunity again. You just can't take anything for granted. I am glad I got that opportunity because who knows, I could have been back playing state cricket, which might not have been a bad thing. An unexpected show of faith went far to restoring Johnson's confidence
 

Johnson also admitted to mechanical problems during the Ashes series - low arm height and awkward wrist position among them - but insisted all could be attributed to a clouded state of mind. "It got technical because I was thinking about it, but in the end it was more of a mental thing," he said. "I had to concentrate on my bowling - where I wanted to bowl the ball and what I wanted to do, how I wanted to get these guys out. I just wasn't doing that. Definitely in the Lord's Test I was thinking about everything possible - I was thinking about my front arm, release point, swinging the ball, just everything. I probably concentrated more towards the end of the tour. I just forgot about off-field stuff."

The Australians are gearing for their first Test series since their Ashes disappointment, and Johnson is expected to headline an attack similar, if not identical, to that which slumped to defeat at Lord's. He is convinced the chastening experiences of four months ago have hardened the resolve of Australia's youthful bowling unit, all of whom are determined to re-establish themselves as an international force against West Indies from Thursday.

The first Test at the Gabba represents an unusual homecoming for Johnson - he originally hails from Queensland, but these days makes his home in Perth. He hopes his previous experiences of the Gabba wicket for Queensland and Australia will convince Ponting to restore him to the new ball role taken away from him in England earlier this year.

"I'm playing for my country, I'm a fast bowler and I'd love the new ball," said Johnson, who has taken 13 wickets at 12.69 in two Tests at the Gabba, including a nine-wicket haul against New Zealand last summer. "That's one of my goals: to open the bowling for Australia.

"Hopefully I can bowl a little bit fuller than I probably have in the past if I get the new ball or whatever it may be. You've got to be a touch fuller, just like the WACA. That's when you get your nicks and your lbws."

Alex Brown is deputy editor of Cricinfo

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© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Comments: 6 
Posted by mdsmedia on (November 26 2009, 02:43 AM GMT)

@historyman: I agree that Johnson's performance at Lords was awful, but one of the worst in history? I've seen worse, remembering a wide to 2nd slip from one lanky englishman which probably setup Australia's whitewash in the previous Ashes series. @swervin: 80-90% of sport is played in the mind. Sure, if you don't have the ability or talent, the mind won't help you, but even with that ability, if your mind isn't on the job you're more likely to fail, especially at a level where inches can make a difference in whether the ball gets a wicket or goes for 4 or 6. Bowling over after over in the nets can't compare to being in the middle of the ground. In the nets you've only got yourself to worry about. In the middle, your next delivery can make a difference between winning and losing. Sure, if you've played 100 tests from your sofa, you wouldn't know that.

Posted by paramthegreat on (November 25 2009, 06:05 AM GMT)

@swervin: dude, just try to study for an exam when you know your family does not care an iota for your results. Thats the sort of pressure we are talking bout. And me, I completely sympathise with Jhonson. Nothing can be worse than the mental aspect of things. If the mental aspect is right, then it si much easier to improve the technical aspects.

Posted by swervin on (November 24 2009, 18:29 PM GMT)

not sure exactly how MJ's "personal turmoil" should effect his bowling so much - maybe we need a psychologist to explain that one - he maybe just had a bad game or was nervous - - don't get me wrong he's a good player (and batsman) that has improved a lot. but find it hard to understand how a guy that bowls so many overs in the nets every day can't land them because his mother's giving him grief about his GF? sounds like a weak excuse if you ask me for a professional sportsman, though Punter seems to like the sound of it - perhaps you want your leading paceman to be more consistent and handle the pressure ?? the other thing with Johnson of course is he has the lefthanders curse of bowling a lot of stuff that the RH batsman can just leave outside off-stump as the ball goes across him which always makes it seem like he wastes a lot of balls. but i admit he has a knack of getting wickets even when he is bowling rubbish. good luck to him though...

Posted by historyman40 on (November 24 2009, 15:57 PM GMT)

Mr Shultz. You must have watched a different set of games in Enland than what I did. From what I saw, for most of the time Johnson could bowl neither line nor length. His peformance on the first morning of the Lords test was the worst I've ever seen in Test cricket and i've been watching since 1951. He certainly has vareiety - he sprays it randomly all over the place. Lindwall and Lillee would have put him to shame.

Posted by andrew-schulz on (November 23 2009, 12:31 PM GMT)

That's a joke, historyman. The fact is, Johnson did not have that bad a series in England. Brett Lee has had a dozen that were worse and virtually nothing has been said. Bollinger will never have the penetration, stamina, or variety that Johnson has. In the ashes, Johnson failed to measure up to his performance in South Africa, which, let's face it, was one of the greatest by an Australian paceman in history.

Posted by historyman40 on (November 23 2009, 09:24 AM GMT)

I hope he's right and that for Australia's, and his own, sake he can regain some measure of control. From what I've seen since the Ashes I'm yet to be convinced. Bollinger looks like a better bet.l

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