It was Mitchell Johnson who frustrated the Indian bowlers in the second test, when another Australian bowler Ryan Harris flourished with the bat. While Smith went on to smash a high-handed 192 for his highest first class score, Harris (74) showed Johnson that even he is no novice with the bat.
Australia, at one point of time, was 216/5 but finished their innings at 530.
So, ultimately, only one question resonates, ‘What goes wrong with Indian bowlers on foreign soils?' ‘Why do they become completely helpless after giving a glimpses of brilliance?'
“These bowlers just don't know the art of getting tail enders out,” fumes former India medium pacer Chetan Sharma, who now appears in a leading Hindi news channel as an expert.
Sharma further says “After taking early wickets they (bowlers) become complacent and take things for granted. They just do not know how to use an old ball.”
“Instead of using new ways (Yorker etc) they try to scare the lower order batsmen with bouncers….Do you think tail enders, now-a-days, are afraid of bouncers….?
Surely not.