Australia limped into Perth with an under-fire attack that had been blasted for 1,137 runs for only six wickets in their previous two innings, but their quartet of pace bowlers led by the talismanic Johnson destroyed England's top order twice in Perth.
Man-of-the-match Johnson was particularly devastating, firstly with the bat when he slogged a top-scoring 62 to help the hosts cobble a defendable first innings total of 268.
He then cut through the English batsmen claiming a six-wicket haul that fired up his fellow seamers to skittle the tourists for 187.
The match-winning performance for a bowler who thrives on confidence and can be dreadfully wayward when bereft of it, not only set up the victory but was the perfect response to critics who had questioned his place in the side.
It was also a smart riposte to the England players who had sought to remind him of his struggles during Australia's losing Ashes tour last year with verbal potshots on the field of play.
"Mitchell's spell was unbelievable, probably one of the odds-on great Ashes spells," Ponting said of the mercurial pace bowler who was dropped after a wayward, wicketless spell in the drawn first Test in Brisbane.
"It's transformed him and it's transformed the way that everybody talks about him ... I heard some rumours and whispers coming in to the game that (England) had Mitch's type of bowling worked out and knew how to play him. I'm not sure that they're saying that now," he added.
Australia's Mitchell Johnson celebrates after picking up a wicket against England during the third Ashes Test in Perth
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