'No passion': Wessels rips into Aussies

Kepler Wessels has taken a big swipe at Australia's limp effort in Perth, blasting them as lacking passion while Steve Smith's captaincy was 'unimpressive'.

Australian cricketers leave the field at stumps

Kepler Wessels have blasted Australia as lacking passion after their limp effort in Perth. (AAP)

"No passion, no fight" - Kepler Wessels hasn't held back in assessing Australia's capitulation to South Africa in the first Test in Perth.

Wessels, who opened the batting for Australia in the 1980s before returning to captain his native South Africa, also slammed Steve Smith's captaincy as "unimpressive" and believes Mitch Marsh should be axed.

"They lacked quality, passion and the fighting spirit associated with Australian teams of the past," Wessels wrote in a column for SuperSport.

"Their batting line-up has a frail look about it. If David Warner or Steve Smith don't score heavily, the Aussies are in trouble."

South Africa overcame a horror first day at the WACA to dominate Australia for the rest of the match, meaning the home side are under plenty of pressure to keep the series alive in the second Test in Hobart starting on Saturday.

Set a fourth-innings record 539 for victory, Australia were all out for 361.

Only Usman Khawaja (97) and Peter Nevill (60no) showed any true grit in the chase after the middle order folded meekly and they missed a huge opportunity to post a big first-innings score after David Warner and Shaun Marsh had set a solid platform.

"As individuals, the Australian players are under huge pressure. They have lost four Test matches in a row," said Wessels, who played 24 Tests for Australia during South Africa's isolation from international cricket.

"This means that captain Steve Smith, in particular, is under the pump.

"His captaincy in this Test match was unimpressive.

"He isn't in the best form with the bat either, which compounds the problem for him personally and for the team as a whole."

Set to come under some of the most scrutiny in Hobart will be allrounder Mitch Marsh, who continues to struggle with the bat.

Marsh, who took two wickets for the match on his home ground in the series opener, averages just 23.18 in his 19 Tests batting in the middle order.

"They have a long tail with allrounder Mitchell Marsh batting at six," said Wessels.

"If the Australian selectors had any sense they would pick six specialist batsmen and opt for four front-line bowlers.

"This will give their team a better balance under Australian conditions."


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Source: AAP


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