Slightly tounge in cheek, but I'll stand by it - winning the Ashes so convincingly down under, mullering India at home on the back of previous acheivements, it all looked so "strong" - the West Indies appeared invincible because they battered you with pace, Australia because Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath would dig them out of just about anything, with England it was the meticulous planning, arduous fitness regime and will to compete.. But when they started going back on decisions like insisting Patel meet minimum fitness standards, it got very easy for other sides to lose respect for them.
It seems that you also fell for the "we will dominate world cricket for the next twenty years" that was being peddled around here.
England beat an awful Australia that needed (and still need) a full rebuild. Then England crushed an insipid India that couldn't fight their way through a wet paper bag...and their subsequent series against the Windies and Oz bore out how far they had fallen.
So, England had an outstanding six months where even modest players filled their boots with easy runs and easy wickets against insipid Australian and Indian teams.
Much is now being made of the fact that "we just don't play well on spinning decks", and while this is true to a degree, there is a deeper problem that will be exposed by an outstanding South African pace attack this northern summer. Namely that some England batsmen like Strauss and Pietersen are past their best, others like Bell and Cook are hot and cold and the number six position has no obvious candidate.
Anderson is a good bowler, but he is hardly in the class of Steyn and Philander. Broad is overrated, Tremlett IS a very good bowler, but at 31 is injury prone and already is approaching the sunset. The fat man must come in, as much for his lower order batting as his excellent seam up bowling. A bowling attack or Anderson, Tremlett, Bresnan and Swann is very, very good.
The batting needs to be strengthened and whether it be one of the young guns like Taylor or Root, or some Saffer than none of us has heard of as yet, only time will tell.
All I know is that I will be watching the test series closely this summer between England and South Africa to get a true gauge of where England is at.
Win that series comfortably, then you are onto something. Lose, and your achievements in that golden six months will be put into perspective.