Jim Laker famously spun the ball so hard that that his close fielders could hear it hum in the air when he took 19 for 90 in the 1956 Manchester Test against Australia.
The Australians promised revenge when Laker finally won selection for a tour down under in 1958-9. But, although the home side won the series 4-0, Laker still topped the bowling averages in both Tests and first class matches.
English spinners, though, have rarely prospered either before or since on the unforgiving Australian pitches and Swann's role in a four-man attack attracted much interest before the last Ashes series.
Swann was ready for the challenge in the midst of unsubtle hints in the Australian media that he might be targeted.
"It's not an easy place to bowl because the wickets don't turn," he said. "Sydney was famous for turning but it doesn't anymore. You need footholes to make the ball go. In Melbourne it was almost going the other way.
"Michael Hussey got after me in the first game in Brisbane but that was because I was bowling badly. A lot of people said he got to you and rattled you but he didn't at all, I just bowled like a drain, I just didn't bowl well.
"People can think what they like, I know what was going on."
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