The exclusion in this series was the second time this year that Australia had asked their lead spinner to warm the bench. After MS Dhoni took him to the cleaners in the Chennai Test, he was dropped from the playing XI for the Hyderabad Test to accommodate Xavier Doherty and Glenn Maxwell, both of whom can be described as stop gap operators more suited to the limited-over variant of the game.
According to the team management, that was done to help Lyon regain his confidence as well as to bolster the Australian batting line-up. It was conveniently overlooked that before Dhoni’s assault, Lyon had produced a dream delivery to sneak through the drive of a well set Sachin Tendulkar and rattle the stumps. India promptly took advantage of the move and cantered to an innings victory.
In the current Ashes, he was recalled for the Old Trafford Test where, bowling with the cushion of a big first innings score, he started off well. There was some purchase on offer from the pitch, and he kept a tight leash on the English batsmen. But after sizing him up for a while, Pietersen danced down the wicket and deposited him twice in the stands to raise up his half-century.
Clarke initially did the right thing by not dropping the fielders back on the boundary, daring Pietersen to repeat the act. But when the usually reticent Ian Bell followed suit, the Australian skipper gave in and Lyon was withdrawn from the attack. Just when the contest was shaping up to be a classic, Clarke betrayed his lack of faith in the offie.
At Chester-le-Street, Pietersen once again looked to take the attack to Lyon. But this time the off-spinner was allowed a longer spell and on the strength of his slight fluctuations and unerring accuracy, he flummoxed the English middle-order. Bowling from around the wicket, he bowled a probing line to have Jonathan Trott caught at short-leg before an arm delivery found Pietersen’s outside edge. Bell was lured into an ill-advised attempted hit over the infield and Bairstow was trapped in front of the stumps on the sweep.
In the second innings, Pietersen, smarting from his earlier dismissal, looked to play Lyon exclusively on the leg-side. But the spinner outfoxed him with a change in pace to get the leading edge. With his seven-wicket haul in the match Lyon served yet another notice to the team management about his abilities.
After Australia slumped to their seventh defeat in their last 8 Tests, Clarke did little to hide his disappointment and spoke about taking positives from the match. The superlative efforts of Ryan Harris and the opening partnership between Warner and Rogers during the chase were mentioned and Lyon once again slipped through the radar.
As another fairy-tale story of Pakistani-refugee-turned-Australian Fawad Ahmed unfolds elsewhere, it is still not certain if Lyon, despite a brilliant show, will feature in the Australian XI when the next Ashes series gets underway later in the year at Brisbane.
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