Gooch has no problems with sledging on the field

'We have a simple plan. Play better' declared England batting coach Graham Gooch ahead of this week's second Ashes Test.

Graham Gooch concedes England did not bat well against Australia in the first Ashes Test. Gareth Copley / Getty Images
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ADELAIDE // England batting coach Graham Gooch yesterday said anyone in the team getting sledged by Australia should take it as a compliment.

The first Test in Brisbane, which Australia won by 381 runs, was tarnished by constant sledging as frustrations boiled over, culminating in Michael Clarke, the captain, being caught by a stump microphone telling England’s Jimmy Anderson to expect a broken arm.

The taunts unsettled several England players, with the batsmen struggling in both innings against a fiery Mitchell Johnson.

Gooch, a 118-Test veteran, believes the tourists will face more goading in the second Test this week in Adelaide and said it generally happened when a batsman or bowler was playing well.

“If someone comes with sledging, people deal with it in different ways,” said the former England captain, who scored nearly 9,000 Test runs.

“Some people it motivates, makes them play better, more determined.

“Some people it can unsettle. But generally, sledging is about getting you to play the man and not the ball, get your focus off the ball.

“Players I’ve seen who’ve dealt with it best either smile at the opposition or take it as a compliment. Generally, if you get sledged, you’re doing OK.”

Gooch said the English players could have handled the Brisbane incident better.

Johnson “bowled fast and inconvenienced a few of our players with the short ball”, Gooch said, but added that short-pitched bowling was nothing new and the England batsmen simply had to deal with it better.

“The crowd whipped it up a bit and we didn’t handle the situation as well as we should have, so we’ve got to improve,” he added.

“We have a simple plan. Play better.”