Sports

Marnus Labuschagne was fighting for life. This is how Sam Konstas saved him

“He’s just relentless, he bowls a relentless length, he attacks the stumps with that perpendicular action, and he’s tough to navigate.

“As a batter, when you start your innings, it is difficult to start your innings, so finding a way to navigate that and through his spells is important.”

Marnus Labuschagne adds to his run tally after watching Sam Konstas perform on Boxing Day.Credit: Getty Images

Labuschagne and Cummins combined for a crucial 57-run stand, taking their country from the doldrums to some sort of safety.

Despite beginning their second innings with a lead of 105, another Bumrah masterclass triggered a collapse of 6-91 – a lead of just 196.

Loading

By the time the Queensland leader departed, Australia’s ascendancy had risen to 253 runs, before Nathan Lyon and Scott Boland combined for a shock half-century partnership that took India’s winning target to historic territory at the MCG.

Without Labuschagne’s return to form, and the defiance of Cummins and Lyons, India would have stood as clear favourites to come from behind and retain the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

While his first century for 18 months still eludes him, Labuschagne appears to have rediscovered much of his mojo. And he credits the nation’s newest sensation as the catalyst for that.

Konstas walked out to bat on debut with the weight of the world on his shoulders – a 19-year-old tasked with taking the attack to Bumrah in front of almost 90,000 punters.

Rather than be deterred by the occasion, he had the audacity to ramp, reverse ramp, and charge down the wicket to the world’s leading quick – a move that Labuschagne believes “got under his skin a bit”.

But the flow-on effect of Konstas’ breathtaking initiation to Test cricket could extend beyond this series, with Cummins confirming that the way he took the game on encouraged the rest of the group to “start being proactive … [and] everyone walked out there with more intent”.

Criticism of Labuschagne before this clash was not without merit.

This year, his four half-centuries had been offset by 10 single-digit scores. His only other knock? Ten against the West Indies.

But watching Konstas play without fear proved a transformative experience. It enabled Khawaja to build his game in a way he had not done this series – passing 50 for the first time – and it enabled Labuschagne to emit a very different energy to the man who limped to two from 52 balls in the first Test.

Irrespective of how Konstas’ form continues ahead of next summer’s Ashes, the mindset shift he has given the top order could be his greatest contribution.

Sam Konstas’ free-flowing and aggressive style brought out the best in some of his fellow batsmen.

Sam Konstas’ free-flowing and aggressive style brought out the best in some of his fellow batsmen.Credit: AP

“Watching that first innings and watching Sam bat and the way he went about it, I was sitting there with Steve [Smith] saying, ‘we really have to look at the way we’re going about it because this looks way more fun’,” Labuschagne said.

“But I think it probably just made me think about what’s my best method: rather than technical things, it was more tactical, and ‘how am I going to find a way through this, and how am I going to score runs’.

“It’s good to be scoring runs, making contributions and helping Australia get in positions to win games.”

Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.

  • For more: Elrisala website and for social networking, you can follow us on Facebook
  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button

Discover more from Elrisala

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading