Lehmann must reinvent himself, says Howard
The high performance chief has also indicated that selectors Mark Waugh and Trevor Hohns could follow the panel's chairman Rod Marsh out the door.
The high performance chief has also indicated that selectors Mark Waugh and Trevor Hohns could follow the panel's chairman Rod Marsh out the door.
There is intense pressure building not just on the batsmen responsible for the failures of Perth and Hobart but on those pulling the strings at CA, all the way up to long-time ...
It is 12 months until the next Ashes series and England are in far better shape than Australia, who have not moved on one iota from when they were bowled out at Trent Bridge ...
Follow all the action live from Blundstone Arena as the Australian team try to rescue the series after a calamitous first innings.
A man has been banned from going to the cricket in Australia for three years after he allegedly wrote racist graffiti aimed at a South African player at Blundstone Arena ...
In the inglorious tradition of Cape Town and Trent Bridge Australia folded ineptly with the bat on the first day of the second Test in Hobart.
Australia's latest embarrassing collapse has given selectors more reason to sharpen the blade but there is no standout waiting in the wings to save them.
If Australia slumps to 6/31 on day one of a Test match and no one is there to see it, did it really happen?
Australia coach Darren Lehmann refused to single out David Warner for the "terrible" shot which sparked the collapse that has the hosts in dire straits in the second Test.
Mitchell Marsh was promised two Tests by Rod Marsh's selection panel and the fact he is not playing in Hobart will not be doing much for the relationship between players and ...
Follow all the action live from the second Test, day 1 from Hobart, Tasmania.
Like a certain superpower, it is time to recognise what is really happening in Australian cricket, not what we might have misled ourselves to think was happening. You might ...
Cape Town, Birmingham, Nottingham, Galle, and now Hobart. Like falling cities in a losing war, the scenes of Australia's cricket disasters have come to our doorstep.
 One of the many endearing qualities of Test match cricket is the way it graciously hosts a conversation about its own mortality, and has done for as long as anyone cares to ...
You have to chuckle when you read criticism about the Australian cricket team when it comes from members of the opposition, past or present.
Five years to the day since Australia were infamously bowled out for 47 in Cape Town Steve Smith's side has suffered another jaw-dropping collapse.
Australia have abandoned their all-rounder policy with wet weather forecast for the second Test against South Africa in Hobart, with Mitch Marsh dropped and South Australia's ...
The best players are well cared for, but in Australia, once maturing cricketers understand that they are not going to play for their country, they find it harder and harder to ...
Steve Smith accepts that criticism of his team is warranted after four successive Test defeats but rejects the assertion that Australian cricket is in turmoil.
Adam Voges has been passed fit to play, but selectors are yet to decide on Mitchell Marsh's fate for the second Test in Hobart.
The question is being posed with a little more force in the wake of the team losing the last four Test matches in a row.
Let's see if we can get this straight: whatever the South Africans were not doing in Perth, they were doing it really well. The Australians thought so.
Australia sought clarification with the company that provides the ball tracking technology over the controversial leg before wicket decision to Mitchell Marsh in the first Test.
It's not just the series on the line in the second Test but careers too, as Australia chase redemption after a horror few months.
Amid the drama of Perth and the subsequent selection and injury fallout, it's been pointed out the last time Australia lost a home season-opening Test was in 1988.
If you tried to synthesise the ideal South African cricketer for these times, you could not come up with any better than Kagiso Rabada.
As Australia searches for its next great fast bowler, one of the most feared tearaways of all time, Dennis Lillee is searching for something else: his primary school teacher.
Cricket great Dennis Lillee is poised to be reunited with one of his earliest inspirations after his 81-year-old primary school teacher answered a radio appeal from the ...
If world events have told us anything in the past week, it is that forecasting is a game for overpaid mugs. The performance of the Australian team in the second Test match? ...
One of the great things about sport is opportunity - whether as a player or a team.
Save articles for later.
Subscribe for unlimited access to news. Login to save articles.
Return to the homepage by clicking on the site logo.