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The Surfer

Australia wanted the Ashes more

Brydon Coverdale
Brydon Coverdale
25-Feb-2013
Geraint Jones looks back after being run out by Ricky Ponting, Australia v England, 3rd Test, Perth, December 18, 2006

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Australia’s newspapers have no doubt why the Ashes series has been such a one-sided affair. As Robert Craddock explains in the Herald Sun, the perception is that Australia were more desperate to win.
Justice has been done ... the Ashes have gone to the team that wanted them the most. Winning the Ashes means everything to this Australian team. They've been saying it for a while but it's not until you see Matthew Hayden shedding a tear or other players simply delirious in celebration that you realise it had become their life's obsession.
Greg Baum, writing in The Age, said Australia was simply harder and tougher than England.
Australia's harder edge was apparent yesterday when Ponting ran out Geraint Jones who, while waiting the outcome of an (unsuccessful) lbw appeal, forgot to put his foot back in his crease. Australia has been alert to every half-chance. Jones was not alert even to the danger. It was daft cricket.
And in the Sydney Morning Herald, Peter Roebuck lauded the man he saw as the driving force in Australia’s win.
Ponting deserved the acclaim that came upon him. He has been the campaign's outstanding figure. Sooner or later his achievements as captain will be acknowledged. A superb cricketer, he presided over an incisive performance from a hungry team. He has stood glint-eyed at the crease, alert at slip or poised at silly point, unblinking and composed. He began with a masterful hundred in Brisbane and ended with a sharp run-out in Perth.

Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here