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We got our selection wrong: Aussie coach Darren Lehmann

Updated on: 10 August,2015 08:21 AM IST  | 
AFP |

Australia coach Darren Lehmann said both he and selection chief Rodney Marsh had to shoulder "a lot" of the blame for the team's Ashes loss

We got our selection wrong: Aussie coach Darren Lehmann

Australian Chairman of Selectors Rod Marsh (right) speaks to coach Darren Lehmann during a nets session ahead of the fourth Ashes Test at Trent Bridge in Nottingham

Nottingham: Australia coach Darren Lehmann said both he and selection chief Rodney Marsh had to shoulder "a lot" of the blame for the team's Ashes loss. England's dominant win by an innings and 78 runs in the fourth Test at Nottingham's Trent Bridge ground on Saturday gave them an unbeatable 3-1 lead in the five-match series.

Australian Chairman of Selectors Rod Marsh (right) speaks to coach Darren Lehmann during a nets session ahead of the fourth Ashes Test at Trent Bridge in Nottingham. Pic/Getty Images
Australian Chairman of Selectors Rod Marsh (right) speaks to coach Darren Lehmann during a nets session ahead of the fourth Ashes Test at Trent Bridge in Nottingham. Pic/Getty Images 


Asked how much responsibility he and fellow former Australia international Marsh, the on-tour selector, bore for the series defeat, Lehmann told reporters: "A lot. As a coach and selectors we've got things wrong at certain times, there's no doubt about that."


Lehmann said a particular mistake at Trent Bridge had been for Australia to abandon their longstanding policy of fielding five bowlers, with all-rounder Mitchell Marsh dropped to make way for older brother Shaun, a top-order batsman.


But Shaun, who made just two runs in the entire match, fell for a first-innings duck as Australia were shot out for a scarcely credible 60 on the first day, with England paceman Stuart Broad taking a stunning Test-best eight for 15 on his Nottinghamshire home ground.

England, with Joe Root scoring 130, piled up 391 for nine declared in reply against an Australia attack who, in the circumstances, needed all the bowling they could muster.

Need extra batsman
"I spoke to Rodney and we wanted the extra batter and spoke to the captain about it in this particular game, but we've always wanted five bowlers, so we probably got that selection wrong," Lehmann said. "Happy to admit when we're wrong, you don't get everything right. We're really strong on having five bowlers and we didn't do that this game." he said.

Defeat at Trent Bridge condemned Australia to their fourth successive Ashes series loss in England, a run stretching back 14 years. A feature of the series so far has been the inability of Australia's batsmen to cope with the swinging and seaming ball on typical English pitches that aid lateral movement.

Flat-track bullies
There have been accusations that too many Australia batsmen are 'flat-track bullies', unwilling as much as unable to alter the methods that serve them so well on flatter home surfaces. "We certainly didn't cope with the swinging or seaming ball in the last two Test matches well enough and that's something we have to get better at," he said.

Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting has said the Dukes ball used in England, which has a more pronounced seam than the Australian Kookaburra, should be introduced for domestic matches in Australia.

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