Of farewells, comebacks and victories
For Australia 2004 was a year of sad goodbyes, glorious hellos, welcome returns and another batch of envious records
Peter English
03-Jan-2005
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For Australia 2004 was a year of sad goodbyes, glorious hellos, welcome returns and another batch of envious records. There was also time for stirring
comebacks from a side that has grown used to being
world champions, and often needs challenges to wake
them. Three times they faced first-innings deficits of
more than 90 in Sri Lanka that were merely detours on
the way to a sweaty whitewash. Someone always came to
the rescue.
Unfortunately, nothing could save David Hookes. His
sad, violent and needless death on January 18 brought
gloom and a respect for his career that would have
been missing if he had passed away in a retirement home.
Two weeks earlier the whole of Australia felt like part of the
lounge-room furniture was going to be missing when
Steve Waugh whirled 80 against India at the SCG in his
final innings. Waugh enjoyed a countrywide farewell
tour while Hookes was remembered through train
graffiti, newspaper tributes and a court case in
November against the bouncer accused of his
manslaughter.
Keith Miller, the former Invincible, also passed away in
October, and new generations learned about the many
treasured deeds of Australia's greatest allrounder.
Typically for a man with film-star aura, Miller's
Melbourne funeral drew an A-list congregation, and
left only six survivors from the 1948 tour.
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Australia head to England this winter still marvelling
at their predecessors' unbeaten run. And this is a
side familiar with streaks. For the first time a team
won five series in a calendar year as Australia ticked
off Sri Lanka (twice), India, New Zealand and Pakistan.
It was an achievement made possible by programming and
an efficient new style under Ricky Ponting's
captaincy.
With Waugh returning to his slippers and home life,
Ponting was sitting on the throne tipped for him in
his teens. Despite the overall success, Ponting
suffered an induction of disruption and was a
spectator for the year's biggest thrill - Australia's
first series win in India for 35 years. The prize
Waugh wanted most, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, was
sealed under the leadership of Adam Gilchrist.
Ponting suffered a broken thumb in the Champions'
Trophy semi-final loss to England and it allowed
Australia to prepare for the future. After much
deliberation the selectors settled on Michael Clarke
instead of Brad Hodge. It was a magnificent move as
Clarke, 23, gave a debut performance full of wonder,
with hints of Doug Walters. He followed his 151 at
Bangalore with a home debut century at the Gabba, and
a team with an average age in the 30s finally had a
young pup.
While Clarke was the discovery in India, Damien Martyn
played the hero with two centuries and a ninety in the
second and third Tests. Martyn, Jason Gillespie and
rain ensured a fighting draw at Chennai, and Australia
sealed the series at Nagpur. The celebrations were
animated and the hangover lasted through the year's
playing blight, a low-scoring dead-rubber loss on an
awful Mumbai pitch.
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New Zealand and Pakistan arrived to close the year and
were shut out. Again the cheer was all Australia's,
Justin Langer finishing 2004 with 1481 runs and Martyn with
1353, while Shane Warne collected 70 wickets.
Warne's return was spectacular as he chased Muttiah
Muralitharan for his world record. Ending his one-year
drugs ban with 26 wickets in Sri Lanka, Warne equalled
Murali in the drawn Test at Cairns, and finally passed
him at Chennai, where he wore red-striped spikes to
colour the moment.
Another great also took his first steps after a long
lay-off. Ankle operations ruled Glenn McGrath out for
a year and he considered retirement before taking five
wickets against Sri Lanka at Darwin. The tentativeness
stayed until he reached India but by the end of the
tour he was again the attack's leader, and his 8 for
24 against Pakistan at the WACA were the second-best
figures by an Australian.
With Warne and McGrath restored as bowling saviours,
Australia's ageing side was complete. The final
frontier had been conquered, but in 2005 they must
cover old ground. Finding new motivation may become
this side's greatest challenge.
Top performers
Justin Langer An amazing year for a batsman who can't lose the tag
of gritty grafter. His 1481 runs, including five hundreds and four fifties, were the second-most by an Australian in a calendar year and they amply made up for the relatively lean times that Hayden and Ponting had.
Shane Warne A year out of the game at 34 could have forced his
retirement. Instead he landed in Sri Lanka ready to
fire and broke the world record in India. His next
target is 600 Test wickets; his ability to bamboozle
remains untarnished.
Peter English is Australasian editor of
Cricinfo.