This was the long, hot afternoon Australia’s bowlers were always likely to face if the batting lineup continued to misfire.

While it didn’t help them that temperatures at the Gabba touched 35 degrees with high humidity, the conditions were somewhat poetic in that they represented how repeated batting struggles will invariably put more heat on the team in the field.

Josh Hazlewood and Australia were made to work hard under a hot Brisbane sun.Credit: Getty Images

Since the Lord’s Ashes Test, the most recent game in which Steve Smith had made a century to anchor Australia’s first innings, only three times in 13 innings have Pat Cummins’ men gone past 200 runs for fewer than four wickets down.

At the other end of the scale, they have been four down for fewer than 150 runs eight times over the same period. These sorts of scorelines put massive pressure on the middle and lower-order for runs, and then transfer more onus onto the bowlers to clean up the opposition quickly.

On a series of “good cricket wickets” affording help to bowlers as well as batters this summer, Cummins and company have often been able to recover things. They have been aided, too, by a tremendous summer’s work from Mitchell Marsh at number six.

Alex Carey’s passable impression of his mentor Adam Gilchrist on the second evening here was another instance of a rearguard to kept Australia in the game. All the while Usman Khawaja has kept doing his best to give the Australians a platform, maintaining the calm tempo that has taken him to global Test player of the year honours.

On the bowling side, Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc have all made impactful bursts at key times to ensure close-fought Test matches ultimately fall Australia’s way. Hazlewood’s scything spell to Pakistan at the SCG in David Warner’s last Test perhaps the most memorable of the lot.

Hazlewood (25 wickets at 14.4), Cummins (24 at 17.04), Nathan Lyon (21 at 24.28) and Starc (20 at 26.15 plus a likely broken toe for Shamar Joseph) have all made the most of the conditions at hand, underlining their global supremacy as a quartet in most conditions.

QOSHE - Batting struggles finally catch up with hot and bothered quicks - Daniel Brettig
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Batting struggles finally catch up with hot and bothered quicks

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27.01.2024

This was the long, hot afternoon Australia’s bowlers were always likely to face if the batting lineup continued to misfire.

While it didn’t help them that temperatures at the Gabba touched 35 degrees with high humidity, the conditions were somewhat poetic in that they represented how repeated batting struggles will invariably put more heat on the team in the field.

Josh Hazlewood and Australia were made to work hard under a hot Brisbane sun.Credit: Getty Images

Since the Lord’s Ashes Test, the most recent game in which........

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