Beaten Aussies face long haul rebuilding

SYDNEY, (Reuters) – Australia’s 14-year domination  of international cricket is officially over after they failed  in their attempt at a smooth succession plan.
A quarter of a century after Australian cricket was plunged  into years of darkness with the the simultaneous retirements of  Dennis Lillee, Greg Chappell and Rod Marsh, officials made the  same mistake again.

Australia’s latest demise had been coming for at least two  years, but was only confirmed last weekend when they  surrendered the Ashes to England.
The official proof of their freefall came with the release  of the International Cricket Council’s test rankings. Having  held the number one spot since the rankings system was  introduced in 2003, Australia has plummeted to fourth.

For an era that began with a bang, it ended in a whimper.
The Australians have won just two of their last five test  series, including their first defeat on home soil in 17 years,  against South Africa last December.
Their record in the shorter forms of the game is just as  embarrassing. They have won just one of their past four one-day  series and failed to make it past the first round of this  year’s Twenty20 World Cup.

It is a far cry from where they were perched just a little  over two years ago. They had just hammered England 5-0 to  regain the Ashes and won the World Cup for the third time in a  row.
Australia had announced their return to the top of world  cricket in dramatic fashion in 1995 when Mark Taylor’s team  defeated the mighty West Indies, who had themselves dominated  the game in the 1980s and 1990s.

RUTHLESS AMBITION

Under Taylor, Steve Waugh and then Ricky Ponting, the  Australians set about re-writing the record books, crushing  their opponents with a team overflowing with talent and  ruthless ambition.
But signs that things were about to get a lot harder  emerged a few years ago when the core of players who had  contributed to their golden era began departing at a rapid  rate.
When Taylor retired in 1999, the team remained fairly  constant until his successor Waugh called it a day in 2004.

However, more than three-quarters of the team that Ponting  inherited from Waugh, either quit or were sacked in the next  three years.
Fast bowler Jason Gillespie was never picked again after  scoring an unbeaten double-century and being named player of  the series against Bangladesh in April 2006.
Leg-spinner Shane Warne, paceman Glenn McGrath, opener  Justin Langer and middle-order batsman Damien Martyn all  retired during or after the triumphant 2006-07 Ashes series.
Wicketkeeper-batsman Adam Gilchrist quit a year later then  wrist-spinner Stuart MacGill followed him into retirement a few  months after.

Opener Matthew Hayden pulled up stumps after last summer’s  loss to South Africa and all-rounder Andrew Symonds was sacked  this year after a series of disciplinary issues.
It took Australia five years to recover after Lillee,  Chappell and Marsh all quit in 1984 and officials vowed never  to let it happen again.

But they failed to develop a proper succession plan and  with more retirements likely in the coming years, the wait for  another great team could take years.
Ponting, the last of Australia’s players from their golden  era, is 34, while pacemen Brett Lee and Stuart Clark are both  in their 30s and no longer guaranteed selection.
Opener Simon Katich, middle-order batsman Mike Hussey and  wicketkeeper Brad Haddin are also in their 30s and Australia  are no closer to finding a permanent replacement for Warne  despite trying several spinners.

The Australian selectors, who copped the brunt of the  criticism for the Ashes defeat, have shown little patience with  the rare few players under 30 who have been given a chance, but  may have to take a riskier approach if Australia is to recover  soon.