Arthur Crabtree wrote:Mitch Johnson? One man superpace wrecking machine. He reverse swung the ball, but he whitewashed England with hostility.
The funny thing is, this outlier example that is used to justify England's approach is, quite literally, the biggest proof one can have of the opposite argument.
The Ashes 13-14 series is almost entirely remembered through the lens of what happened at Brisbane due to a few iconic moments in that game; Trott looking visually rattled by Johnson, and Johnson then tearing England's tail away in a barrage of short pitched stuff, as the crowd bayed for blood, and Clarke shouted at English players to get ready for hospital. But this lasting memory of events is false - Trott was severely mentally ill, and despite the narrative of the time portraying that as representing an England team crumbling under fear, his discomfort had nothing to do with what was going on during the game - he was, quite literally, severely ill. And the game was absolutely dead in the water before Johnson came on with 400-450 left to get, and the mighty Jimmy Anderson and Chris Tremlett to bowl at to finish the game.
Aside from these two examples, Johnson did not really revert back to the Brisbane barrage at any point. The data on his performance is conclusive - during his career, when this series is taken out the equation, he had I believe the highest proportion of wickets caught in the history of the game, testament to the fact he relied on short pitch bowling and rarely targeted the stump. During 13-14, he not only got these percentages up, but staggeringly so. He went from someone with one of the worst ratios of balls hitting, to historical high numbers - and after Brisbane, half of his wickets in the series were bowled/lbw - historically high numbers of dismissals for a series. And almost all of his caught dismissals were from balls full of a length.
The Mitchwash was not about express pace and short pitched barrages, the Mitchwash was a bowler finding a rare groove of hitting line and length with consistent, staggering accuracy. If you don't think seam did anything for Mitch, then watch the first ball of the 2nd test..... one of the greatest balls ever delivered, line, length, nips a long way from the deck... Cook had zero chance.
Ryan Harris was a bowler who digged it in and relied on seam movement.... he did also average under 20 that series too.