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Australia defeated in Ashes Test | Amid the humiliating second Test defeat to England in Adelaide yesterday, a strange light is shining on Australia - they have risen to fourth in the International Cricket Council (ICC) Test rankings. The jump came after Sri Lanka drew a three-Test series at home to the lowly West Indies, following rain interruptions in all games.
That result caused Sri Lanka to drop from third to fifth, as teams lose more points
for bad results at home against lesser-ranked teams, the Sydney Morning Herald
reports. But this good news will turn sour for Australia if they lose one more
Test in the Ashes series, which would put them back to fifth. The ICC is introducing
a Test championship in 2013 featuring only the top four ranked nations, so Australia
desperately needs to turn their form around. They have a tour to Sri Lanka and
South Africa next year that could well determine the fate of the final place in
the top four. England, meanwhile, will have more lofty goals. If they can win
the Ashes 3-0, they will rise to an all-time high of second place in the rankings
alongside South Africa and below India. If Australia can fight their way back
and win this series, they will jump to third ahead of England. Meanwhile, Australian
captain Ricky Ponting has dropped out of the top 20 in the ICC Test batting rankings
for the first time since 2001. The 35-year-old Tasmanian, one of the outstanding
batsmen of his generation, has dropped 12 places to occupy 25th spot in the latest
edition of the rankings published overnight. There are no Australians in the top
10 leading batsmen, while left-arm seamer Mitchell Johnson, dropped after the
Brisbane Test, is the only Australian in the world's current top 10 bowlers.
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