Australia emerge from Test season with flying colours and new options

The aging demographic of the pace attack will continue to raise questions, and Marnus Labuschagne’s form is a watching brief, but there has been an injection of new faces

Alex Malcolm10-Feb-20252:32

Smith: Everyone stood up at different times and did a terrific job

Following the crushing first Test loss to India in Perth in November, there was a moment when Australia’s Test team looked as though they may have reached a cliff much sooner than predicted.Ten weeks, five Test wins and two significant series victories later, that seismic defeat in Perth feels like nothing but a bump in the road, with the horizon looking even better than expected.Australia finish a seven-Test home and away summer with five wins, a loss and a draw. It is a worse record than the six wins from seven they produced in 2023-24, but the performances were far more impressive.Related

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Last summer they used just 12 players across seven Tests home and away, playing three of them without a single player under the age of 29, and produced less than convincing series wins over Pakistan and New Zealand whilst drawing with West Indies at home in between.This summer they played 18, with Cameron Green missing all seven through injury, Josh Hazlewood playing just two and Pat Cummins missing two, winning two series with two completely different XIs.Three players under 25 debuted, including two under 21. Two stars of the Sheffield Shield in Beau Webster and Josh Inglis came in and performed like the ready made players that they are. A new baggy green was handed out in four straight Tests, something that hadn’t happened for 27 years.It was a summer where Australia showed versatility and adaptability in both decision-making and execution across a vast spectrum of conditions and opponents.Beau Webster has shown his adaptability early in his Test career•Getty ImagesThe team and the selectors wore the criticism of running a closed shop after the defeat in Perth, instead opting to calmly stay the course and make just one injury-forced change in Adelaide. But they made bold calls when it was least expected. Having won in Adelaide and dominated four of five rainy days in Brisbane, they made the brave decision to pick the 19-year-old Sam Konstas in Melbourne.After winning in Melbourne, there was an expectation that nothing would change in Sydney. But their best player from the previous summer, and arguably the most popular player in the dressing room, Mitchell Marsh was dropped after scoring just 73 runs in seven innings and replaced by the Shield’s best allrounder in Webster.