Tag: Ben Duckett

  • Can Aussies complete ultimate Headingley revenge?

    Can Aussies complete ultimate Headingley revenge?

    Last time Australia played England at Headingley, it was one of the greatest test matches of all time. Will history repeat itself – with a different winner?

    Chris Woakes urged England to recreate the spirit of Headingley 2019 as they look to revive their Ashes hopes against Australia, but without any of the accompanying tension.

    England ended Saturday’s rain-marred third day of the third Test on 27-0 in pursuit of a victory target of 251.

    They have two days in which to score the remaining 224 runs they require but the pressure is on England in a match, at 2-0 down with three to play, they must win if they are to regain the Ashes.

    In 2019, England made 362-9 to beat Australia by just one wicket in a thrilling Ashes clash at Headingley thanks mainly to current captain Ben Stokes’s astounding 135 not out.

    That series ended all square at 2-2.

    “I hope so, because that means we win the Test match,” said Woakes, when asked if England would invoke the spirit of 2019 on Sunday’s fourth day.

    “It would be nice to do it a little bit easier this time,” added the seamer, who has taken six wickets in his first Test in over a year, including a valuable 3-68 as Australia were dismissed for 224 in their second innings on Saturday.

    The past 12 months have seen England achieve several spectacular run chases, including a national Test record 378 against India at Edgbaston last year.

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  • ‘Clearly like losing’: Signs greats are turning on Bazball

    ‘Clearly like losing’: Signs greats are turning on Bazball

    England’s commitment to ‘Bazball’ is testing the patience of former players, who didn’t hold back after a number of key wickets were thrown away on day three.

    England’s commitment to ‘Bazball’ is testing the patience of former players and fans after another careless batting display left their Ashes hopes hanging by a thread.

    Captain Ben Stokes and Harry Brook walked out to bat at Lord’s on Friday with the second Test nicely poised despite a chaotic final session the previous evening.

    But the home side slumped from 278-4 to 325 all out, giving Australia a precious first-innings lead of 91.

    Once again, England were the architects of their own downfall.

    Ollie Pope, Ben Duckett and Joe Root all gifted their wickets to Australia, even though the visitors’ short-ball plan was blindingly obvious.

    England had a nightmare start on the third day when Stokes, who had played responsibly the previous evening, was dismissed by Mitchell Starc off the second ball.

    England, in their previous incarnation – and most sides in Test history – would have taken stock and re-built. But not this team.

    Brook, who made 50, threw way his wicket after an ugly swipe to a Starc delivery ended up in the hands of Australia captain Pat Cummins.

    “Shocking shot,” former England captain Michael Vaughan told the BBC.

    “England clearly like losing. Yesterday they gifted Australia three wickets.

    “They arrive on day three, the pitch is doing a bit more. To see that wicket and Australia now know they are bowling to the tail.”

    Again England did not learn.

    Jonny Bairstow, the last recognised specialist batsman, chipped the ball tamely to Cummins off the bowling of Josh Hazlewood.

    Ollie Robinson charged down the track to part-time spinner Travis Head and got an edge. Stuart Broad missed a sweep against the same bowler.

    Alastair Cook, who skippered England to two Ashes series wins, said there was “a sense of shock around the ground”.

    “We keep going back to that spell, how precious Test match runs and sessions are,” he said.

    “We’ve all watched enough cricket, when you get in positions, it is so precious and you have to realise how precious that is and treasure it.”

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  • Australia’s worst fears confirmed in seismic Lyon blow

    Australia’s worst fears confirmed in seismic Lyon blow

    Australia have received the worst possible news to start day three of the Lord’s Test – as they prepare for another English onslaught. Follow the live action inside.

    Australia’s Ashes campaign goes on the line on Friday, with all eyes on how Pat Cummins and his men will respond to a disastrous second day.

    Losing frontline spinner Nathan Lyon (calf) is cruel blow, as was the return of Bazball swinging the Test back in England’s favour after six sessions.

    The host start day three just 138 runs in arrears, and with their hard-hitting middle order ready to punish Australia.

    How will the tourists respond?

    Follow all the Day Three action in our live coverage below.

    7.10PM: LYON TO BE RULED OUT OF ASHES

    By Ben Horne and Daniel Cherny

    Australian superstar Nathan Lyon is expected to be ruled out of the rest of the Ashes series after suffering a calf injury on day two of the Lord’s Test.

    While nothing has been officially confirmed, Lyon arrived at the ground on crutches and all signs point to him missing the remaining three Tests.

    It would be a seismic blow for Australia to lose a bowler who was on track to be the leading wicket-taker this series.

    It means Todd Murphy is set to fill the shoes of Australia’s greatest ever off-spinner for the third Test starting Thursday next week.

    Australia will have to rely on Travis Head to provide the spin overs to get them through the rest of the second Test.

    Working against Lyon is the fact that this is the most congested Ashes series of all time, meaning there’s precious little wiggle room for him to make a miracle recovery.

    7.00PM: HOW WILL AUSSIES REACT TO LIFE WITHOUT LYON?

    As a new day dawned in London, Pat Cummins and the Australian team were forced to come to grips with the reality that they’ll be a man down for the rest of the Lord’s Test – and likely without Nathan Lyon for the rest of the series.

    A calf injury suffered late on day two left the star spinner, in his 100th consecutive Test match, grimacing in pain as he limped off the field.

    It will leave Australia a bowler short, with 16 wickets still to take to win the second Test and take a 2-0 series lead.

    They’ll rely even more heavily on the pace trio of Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc, likely sharing the rest of the overs between all-rounder Cameron Green and part-time spinners Travis Head and Steve Smith.

    But there’s no replacing a player of Lyon’s quality. And England have shown a willingness to attack at all times – so if they sense a weakness in Australia, they will not hold back.

    6.30PM: NO REGRETS: WILL SHORT-BALL TRAP HAUNT ENGLAND?

    Ben Duckett insisted England had no regrets about their aggressive game-plan after the opener was one of several batsman to fall into Australia’s short-ball trap on a dramatic day at Lord’s.

    In reply to Australia’s first-innings total of 416, England had seized back the momentum as they raced to 188-1 during Thursday’s second day of the second Test.

    But Duckett, Ollie Pope and Joe Root all perished playing needlessly attacking hook shots in response to a barrage of Australia bouncers.

    That reduced England to 222-4 before captain Ben Stokes restored order with a slightly more cautious approach alongside Harry Brook as the hosts reached 278-4 by the close of play.

    Despite handing Australia a lifeline, Duckett was adamant there would be no recriminations in the England dressing room.

    “I don’t regret it at all. I would have been gutted with myself if I had gone into my shell and gloved one to the keeper,” Duckett said after he was caught in the deep for 98 by David Warner.

    “Ten metres either side of him I would have got a hundred. I’m not happy I got out but I’d rather get out like that.

    “There wasn’t really any discussion. No one in that dressing room will be disappointed with how Pope got out. They will be gutted it didn’t go for six.

    “Pope said ‘I’m going to smack it into the stands’ and I said ‘do it’. He was so unlucky to get a toe end on it.

    “It’s the way we play our cricket. If we went into our shells and got bombed out it would be totally against the way we play.”

    With the match evenly poised, play will resume today at 8pm AEST. – AFP

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  • Twitter Reactions: Australia’s late riposte slows England’s batting juggernaut on eventful second day of Lord’s Test

    Twitter Reactions: Australia’s late riposte slows England’s batting juggernaut on eventful second day of Lord’s Test

    The exhilarating action continued in the second Test of Ashes 2023 on Day 2 at Lord’s as Australia resumed their innings on 339/5. Steven Smith (85*) and Alex Carey (11*) continued to take Australia’s innings ahead. England struck early in the day as Stuart Broad got rid of Carey (22) early in the day. However, Smith continued his innings and brought up his 32nd Test hundred with a lovely cover drive against Anderson.

    Pat Cummins played another valuable knock lower down the order (22*) to give good support to Smith. However, after Smith got dismissed for 110, the other batters couldn’t contribute much as Australia got bundled out for 416 in the first innings. Josh Tongue (3/98) was the pick of the bowlers for England.

    In reply, England got off to a brilliant start as openers Zak Crawley (48) and Ben Duckett added 91 runs for the first wicket. Lyon gave the first blow to England getting Crawley out stumped. Ollie Pope walked in next and added 97 runs for the second wicket with Duckett.

    Seeing England in full control, Australia came up with a short ball ploy in the third session to unsettle the batters. The plan worked immediately as Pope (42) got dismissed trying to pull Cameron Green. Three balls later there was more drama to follow as Green further got Root dismissed when the batter was caught behind off a short ball. However much to his dismay, he overstepped giving Root a life.

    England lost three wickets in the final session

    At the other end, Duckett was closing in on his hundred but he also fell prey to the short ball ploy and holed out to David Warner at fine leg on 98. Root also couldn’t make the most of his reprieve as he once again became the victim of short-pitched delivery and hit one to Smith at square leg, who dived forward to complete a brilliant catch. Within a space of 45 balls, England went from 188/1 to 222/4.

    After a flurry of wickets, Ben Stokes (17* off 57) and Harry Brook (44*) took England to stumps with their unbeaten 56-run stand. England finished Day 2 on 278/4 trailing by 138 runs. Meanwhile, Twitter was abuzz with reactions on another action-packed day of Test cricket.

    Here are some of the top Tweets:



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  • Aussies mull attack for green top as England gamble on Root

    Aussies mull attack for green top as England gamble on Root

    Riding high on a famous two-wicket win, Australia has a big call to make in the second Test against an England team that has gone all-in on a new look attack.

    Leading the series 1-0, Australia faces England at Lord’s – starting Wednesday, 8pm AEST – still riding high from a famous two-wicket victory and with a big decision to make between Starc and Boland. England meanwhile has banked on Joe Root to carry its spin bowling load.

    Partly cloudy conditions with a top of 24 degrees are expected on Wednesday but rain is forecast for days two and four of the Test.

    By his own admission Starc underwhelmed in the World Test Championship final but the left-armer is confident he has found his rhythm again after two hard weeks of training.

    Boland meanwhile copped plenty of stick from the England batters in the opening Test, conceding more than five runs per over in each innings while doing minimal damage.

    Boding in Boland’s favour are visibly different conditions for the second Test, with the Lord’s pitch sporting plenty of green grass. It promises more assistance to the seamers than Edgbaston’s flat surface provided, making airspeed less important.

    “I hear a whisper Mitchell Starc might come in because of the way England play Scott Boland. If there’s lateral movement and it looks like it’s going to do anything, I think they have to play Boland once again and go with the same team,” Michael Vaughan said on Fox Cricket’s Ashes preview.

    “They should have used Starc at Edgbaston because it was flat.”

    England confirmed its XI on match eve, with bustling seamer Josh Tongue replacing spinner Moeen Ali. Ali struggled with a blister on his spinning finger in the first Test, but England’s decision to call up Tongue instead of young leggie Rehan Ahmed suggests they are expecting seaming conditions.

    The selection means Root will carry the bulk of the spin-bowling load for England.

    “He’s gone from strength to strength and the more responsibility that I’ve tried to give him with the ball, I think has brought out another side of Joe,” England captain Ben Stokes said of Root’s spin bowling.

    England XI: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (c), Jonny Bairstow (wk), Stuart Broad, Ollie Robinson, Josh Tongue, James Anderson

    Australia possible XI: David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steven Smith, Travis Had, Cameron Green, Alex Carey (wk), Pat Cummins, Scott Boland/Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Josh Hazlewood

    Jacob KuriypeContent producer

    Jacob Kuriype is a writer for CODE Sports. Born and raised in Sydney’s multicultural south-west, Jacob is passionate about storytelling that celebrates and draws on diversity in all its shapes and sizes. He got his first taste of the industry with Foxtel during the 2012 Olympics, joining Fox Sports’ digital team the following year. He has covered cricket extensively since 2015, while also chipping in for football, NRL and rugby. He loves most sports but is poor at all of them.

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  • Feeble to fearless: Broad explains England’s Test revolution

    Feeble to fearless: Broad explains England’s Test revolution

    As English cricket was at its lowest point, Brendon McCullum changed the game with a new way to play. Stuart Broad opens up on what he called possibly the best year of his life.

    Stuart Broad has claimed England’s breathtaking Bazball has delivered the greatest year of his sporting life – even if it made him nearly choke on his chocolate biscuit.

    At his home ground no less.

    In a soon to be released interview with Mark Howard’s Howie Games podcast, champion fast bowler Broad pulls back the curtain surrounding the Bazball mystique to offer rare anecdotal insight into the cavalier English mindset which will confront Australia in the Ashes opener at Edgbaston on Friday.

    After winning just one of their previous 17 Tests, England have won 11 of 13 since captain Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum took over and introduced a fan-friendly, cavalier, failure-is-fine attitude that has unleashed the team’s inner beast.

    “It is quite an exciting time for me to talk about cricket because I am 36 and arguably had the best year of my life,’’ Broad told Fox Cricket’s Howard.

    “I don’t know how many professionals can say that they are approaching each day with such joy at the back end of their career.

    “Baz and Stokesy are a huge part of that because of the way they want us to play our cricket. For me to train and play with no consequences and play it like league cricket. That is exactly how I would like to play at the end of my career.’‘

    DON’T MENTION THE RESULT

    Winning and losing are the brutal bottom line in sport but those words have vanished in the English dressing room.

    “I have not heard them talk about the result once in the entire year. Never is it ‘we could have won that game’ or ‘we need to win this game’.

    “The result does not matter. It is all about being entertaining and the process. Without question the first role of our group is about entertaining the people who have bought a ticket or are listening on the radio or watching on the telly.

    “It was about ridding the fear of failure which is so hard to do in professional sport because it is there at all times. They have done it.’’

    GO HARD OR GO HOME

    Broad said Bazball has taken him to some quirky place including one Test against New Zealand at his home ground Trent Bridge last year when the Kiwis made 553 and England were cruising with Ollie Pope and Joe Root on the way to massive centuries.

    But it was not enough for McCullum who approached Broad upstairs.

    Broad, relishing the fact he could relax down the order, had just started to sip a coffee and munch on a chocolate biscuit when McCullum said “do you want to get your pads on?’’

    “I said: ‘What? Ahead of Bairstow and Stokes … why?’

    “He said, ‘Well, it’s your home ground, they are batting beautifully, but the crowd is a bit subdued and I thought if you go in and hit your first ball for four there will be a massive roar. Then you could have a massive hack at your second ball and if you get out we will have still got the crowd going again’.

    “I am like, ‘OK, can do’. So I padded up with the only aim to hit my first ball for four and after that it didn’t matter. Fortunately they kept batting and it did not happen but the mindset was if you could give someone a cheer for a few seconds you have done your role for the team that day. It means turning up each day is so free because I can hit one boundary and have a good day instead of having to get 50.’’

    THE BOWLERS

    Batsman have dominated Bazball headlines but the change to bowling mindsets has been staggering with an emphasis on taking wickets … at any cost.

    Broad, 36, and the extraordinary Jimmy Anderson, 40, have had great years but they have had to change from being run misers to occasionally bowling like millionaires.

    “Jimmy and I have a combined age of 76. We are quite ingrained in what we do. I listened to an interview with Scott Boland yesterday and he was talking about his job is (to keep down the) economy rate.

    “To be honest Jimmy and I have had that mindset for the majority of our career but what Stokesy wants from us is to forget about economy rate. He doesn’t care about boundaries.

    “They don’t matter. His theory is whatever boundaries the opposition hit we will hit more. It’s about wickets all the time. So 10 overs 3-75 is more valuable to him because it is speeding the game up than 10 overs 0-12.

    “If I get hit for four though mid-wicket after bowling a leg stump half volley instead of thinking I will put deep square back to cover it I will get a short leg in because I should not be bowling that ball. Hit the pitch harder and nip the ball back.

    “Say ‘Smudge’ (Steve Smith) hits 30 off 12 balls and gets out. That’s our win. His batting plan is 150 off 320. You would argue the more gaps we can leave him and if he makes one mistake with a fielder in the right place …

    “We went from barely taking 20 wickets in a Test in a year to, in 13 Tests, I think we haven’t done it only once. Things like leaving mid-on and mid-off up. If you get hit for six, ‘OK, it again’. Hit for six again, ‘OK, do it again’. Then do it again, ‘OK, it’s gone straight up in the air’. It’s a great little battle. You just have sort of try to forget about economy rates.’’

    Robert CraddockSenior sports journalist

    Robert ‘Crash’ Craddock is regarded as one of Queensland’s best authorities on sport. ‘Crash’ is a senior sport journalist and columnist for The Courier-Mail and CODE Sports, and can be seen on Fox Cricket.

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  • Forget what you knew before Bazball: This is the new normal

    Forget what you knew before Bazball: This is the new normal

    England’s batting has morphed from a tired 1960s bungalow into a 21st century triple-story monstrosity. Forget everything you knew about the era BB: ‘Before Bazball’ – this is the new normal.

    You’ve probably tried to put them out of your mind, but remember back to those weeks of March, 2020.

    Masks, elbow greetings, social distancing, lockdowns, viral loads. Many largely foreign concepts became mainstays of the lexicon. It gave rise to that lamentable term: the new normal.

    Friday at Edgbaston was Test cricket’s day of the new normal.

    For a series ahead of which the range of foreseeable outcomes quite reasonably stretched to 5-0 in either extreme, the Ashes’ Bazball initiation went pretty much to script.

    While England’s bowling has changed marginally since Brendon McCullum took over, it is the batting where a tired 1960s bungalow was knocked over for a 21st century triple-story monstrosity in which the doors open with blinking sensors.

    And 13 months into the McCullum era, England has shifted the batting paradigm in Test cricket so far that nothing should really come as a shock.

    Just about everything that happened on day one in Birmingham fell within the expected range of Bazball.

    England’s batters played aggressively. They took risks. With the exception of Ben Stokes, they all survived at least 10 balls. With the exception of Joe Root, none of them made it to survive 100 deliveries.

    They lived by the sword, scoring at a rate pretty much on par with how England has made its runs since McCullum took over.

    Ben Duckett, who as a rule doesn’t leave, played at a ball he certainly didn’t have to and nicked Josh Hazlewood inside the first four overs, ending a nice looking 12.

    Jonny Bairstow and Moeen Ali were both stumped by Alex Carey trying to dance down the wicket to Nathan Lyon. Stuart Broad was clean bowled by Cameron Green trying to slog.

    This is all Bazball.

    In between times, England cross-bat manifesto gave Australia’s outfielders an almighty workout. From the outset the Aussies had sweepers. Pat Cummins didn’t even bring the field in when Joe Root was on 99.

    Zak Crawley and Harry Brook both lived dangerously but productively. Root reverse scooped Scott Boland for six. It was such a nice trick he did it again to Cummins.

    Stokes declared with his best batter on 118 not out and with more than four days left in the match. It was the earliest a team has ever declared in an Ashes Test. It would have seemed crazy little over a year ago but it was the fourth time England has declared its first innings closed inside 90 overs in the Bazball era.

    So here’s the great irony of it all. The style of play that has revolutionised Test cricket and breathed life into the English game has become formulaic. When the hosts were milking singles at various stages over the first two sessions the game felt a lot like a one-day international.

    This must have been a bit like what it was like at the early one-day World Cups in England. Whites, no fielding restrictions, and being really impressed by teams scoring at more than 4.5 an over.

    Australian paceman Hazlewood said he hadn’t been shocked at the declaration. Or at anything England dished up.

    “The first day was probably as I expected pretty much,” he said.

    Similarly Bairstow has learned to accept the eccentric.

    “I’m sure there’s many decisions that Ben has made that has probably taken commentators and some people by surprise. So it was no surprise to us,” Bairstow said.

    “A 20-minute slot for any opening pair is something that’s not very nice, and can be a bit niggly.”

    There were perhaps just a couple of surprises. One was that England decided to bat first after winning the toss. And even then, the choice was only made after Stokes was presented with the type of flat wicket he had asked for months in advance.

    The other surprise was Root. Not that he batted well, because he’s been doing it for more than a decade. Not that he made a Test century, because this was his 30th. Not that he anchored the innings of a freewheeling side, because he’s done that in one-day cricket and it helped take England to a world title.

    But that he did so in the Ashes, ending a run of 12 straight Test fifties against Australia that he had failed to convert into three figures.

    They were all in the era BB: Before Baz.

    It was a time of cluttered minds, fear of failure, captaincy burden. That was the old England, the old Root. It is a distant memory.

    Daniel ChernyStaff writer

    Daniel Cherny is a Melbourne sportswriter, focusing on AFL and cricket. Having started his career at Back Page Lead, Daniel spent eight years at The Age, during which time he covered Australian Test cricket tours of Bangladesh and the UAE, as well as the 2016 Rio Olympics. He has been recognised for both his AFL and cricket writing, including winning the Clinton Grybas Rising Star Award at the 2019 Australian Football Media Association Awards. He is also a compulsive Simpsons quoter.

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  • England bat first as Aussies make brutal selection call

    England bat first as Aussies make brutal selection call

    Australia have lost the toss – and will get their first look at Bazball after England chose to bat, while Pat Cummins confirmed one change amid rumours of a Mitch Marsh call-up. FOLLOW LIVE

    England have won the toss and will bat first at Edgbaston – giving Australia’s bowlers their first look at the all-out batting blitz that has changed the way England plays cricket.

    That’s right, it’s Bazball time.

    Meanwhile, Australia has made just one change to their World Test Championship final-winning team – with Josh Hazlewood making a return from injury in place of Mitchell Starc.

    7.50PM: PREDICTIONS, PREDICTIONS

    It’s almost game on at Edgbaston. But who do we think deserves favouritism to claim the Ashes?

    Dpes anyone have any idea?

    Seriously, anyone who tries to tell you they know what is about to come over the next six weeks is a fibber.

    The only person on the planet tipping with any confidence is Glenn McGrath, and that’s because he’s basically got “Australia 5-0” inked on his chest.

    The only certainty is that it’s going to be a wild ride. And it all begins in 10 minutes.

    7.40PM: BRING ON BAZBALL

    It was going to be captivating either way but what a brilliant early look at England’s unstoppable Bazball top order against Australia’s immovable object attack.

    A fitting way to start what shapes as a seismic series in terms of cricket philosophies.

    Starc is stiff but his record in England was a concern and the advantage his footmarks provide Nathan Lyon is overstated. – DANIEL CHERNY

    7.30PM: AUSSIES TO BOWL FIRST, CHANGES CONFIRMED

    Here comes Bazball!

    England have won the toss and will bat first at Edgbaston – giving Australia’s bowlers their first look at the all-out batting blitz that has changed the way England plays cricket.

    Meanwhile, the pre-game shenanigans have proven just that – there is no Mitchell Marsh in the Australian team, but there is a Scott Boland. And a Josh Hazlewood. But no Mitchell Starc.

    “It looks a really good cricket wicket. Now we’ve got to go and put some runs on the board,” says England captain Ben Stokes.

    Australian skipper Pat Cummins confirms he would’ve also had a bat first on a wicket that

    “It’s a good problem to have, having someone like Josh Hazlewood come in,” says Cummins.

    AUSTRALIAN TEAM: David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Travis Head, Cameron Green, Alex Carey, Pat Cummins, Nathan Lyon, Josh Hazlewood, Scott Boland

    7.15PM: BOLAND…. IN!

    The word from our man on the ground, Dan Cherny, is that Scott Boland is a certainty to play, while Mitchell Starc is looking as though he has missed out.
    Josh Hazlewood is warming up and looks like he will make his comeback from injury on cricket’s biggest stage.

    Mitch Marsh? A massive red-herring, perhaps!

    6.45PM: AUSTRALIA’S ASHES BOMBSHELL – OR MIND GAMES?

    Are Australia pondering the first staggering selection call of the Ashes?

    Or is it just more mind games ahead of cricket’s most anticipated series.

    All-rounder Mitchell Marsh was spotted marking out his runup at the iconic ground for the first Test, suggesting the 32-Test veteran would feature in Andrew McDonald’s first-choice XI for the all-important series.

    That came after it appeared Scott Boland had won his battle to join captain Pat Cummins in the Australian attack – perhaps suggesting two of Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Cameron Green look like missing the opening Test,.

    However, then Hazlewood also later marked out his runup. And left everyone a little more in the dark about the team Cummins will lead out in Birmingham.

    But in all likelihood it means Boland, the man who destroyed England at the MCG, will feature at Edgbaston to partner Cummins.

    The final make-up of the Australian final team will be confirmed soon at the toss.

    AUSSIES TO WEAR BLACK ARMBANDS FOR MURDER VICTIMS

    Players from England and Australia will wear black armbands and observe a minute’s silence on day one of the first Ashes Test to honour the victims of a knife and vehicle rampage in the central English city of Nottingham this week.

    Three people were stabbed to death, including teenage students Barnaby Webber and Grace Kumar, both of whom were keen cricketers.

    “The deeply distressing scenes witnessed in Nottingham this week have brought immense sorrow to everyone, particularly the cherished friends and families of the victims,” Ben Stokes said.

    “It is impossible to express how much their lives and futures have been tragically disrupted.

    “These events sadden the England cricket teams, and we are thinking about those affected at this harrowing time. As a gesture of respect, we will honour them by wearing black armbands.”

    FEEBLE TO FEARLESS: BROAD EXPLAINS BAZBALL REVOLUTION

    Stuart Broad has claimed England’s breathtaking Bazball has delivered the greatest year of his sporting life – even if it made him nearly choke on his chocolate biscuit.

    At his home ground no less.

    In a soon to be released interview with Mark Howard’s Howie Games podcast, champion fast bowler Broad pulls back the curtain surrounding the Bazball mystique to offer rare anecdotal insight into the cavalier English mindset which will confront Australia in the Ashes opener at Edgbaston on Friday.

    After winning just one of their previous 17 Tests, England have won 11 of 13 since captain Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum took over and introduced a fan-friendly, cavalier, failure is fine attitude that has unleashed the team’s inner beast.

    “It is quite an exciting time for me to talk about cricket because I am 36 and arguably had the best year of my life,’’ Broad told Fox Cricket’s Howard.

    “I don’t know how many professionals can say that they are approaching each day with such joy at the back end of their career.

    “Baz and Stokesy are a huge part of that because of the way they want us to play our cricket. For me to train and play with no consequences and play it like league cricket. That is exactly how I would like to play at the end of my career.’‘

    DONT MENTION THE RESULT

    Winning and losing are the brutal bottom line in sport but those words have vanished in the English dressing room.

    “I have not heard them talk about the result once in the entire year. Never is it “we could have won that game’’ or “we need to win this game.’’

    “The result does not matter. It is all about being entertaining and the process. Without question the first role of our group is about entertaining the people who have bought a ticket or are listening on the radio or watching on the telly.

    “It was about ridding the fear of failure which is so hard to do in professional sport because it is there at all times. They have done it.’’

    GO HARD OR GO HOME

    Broad said Bazball has taken him to some quirky place including one Test against New Zealand at his home ground Trent Bridge last year when the Kiwis made 553 and England were cruising with Ollie Pope and Joe Root on the way to massive centuries.

    But it was not enough for McCullum who approached Broad upstairs.

    Broad, relishing the fact he could relax down the order, had just started to sip a coffee and munch on a chocolate biscuit when McCullum said “do you want to get your pads on?’’

    “I said “What. ahead of Bairstow and Stokes … why?’’

    “He said, well, it’s your home ground, they are batting beautifully, but the crowd is a bit subdued and I thought if you go in and hit your first ball for four there will be a massive roar. Then you could have a massive hack at your second ball and if you get out we will have still got the crowd going again.

    “I am like “OK, can do.’ So I padded up with the only aim to hit my first ball for four and after that it didn’t matter. Fortunately they kept batting and it did not happen but the mindset was if you could give someone a cheer for a few seconds you have done your role for the team that day. It means turning up each day is so free because I can hit one boundary and have a good day instead of having to get 50.’’

    THE BOWLERS

    Batsman have dominated Bazball headlines but the change to bowling mindsets has been staggering with an emphasis on taking wickets … at any cost.

    Broad, 36, and the extraordinary Jimmy Anderson, 40, have had great years but they have had to change from being run misers to occasionally bowling like millionaires.

    “Jimmy and I have a combined age of 76. We are quite ingrained in what we do. I listened to an interview with Scott Boland yesterday and he was talking about his job is (to keep down the) economy rate.

    “To be honest Jimmy and I have had that mindset for the majority of our career but what Stokesy wants from us is to forget about economy rate. He doesn’t care about boundaries.

    “They don’t matter. His theory is whatever boundaries the opposition hit we will hit more. It’s about wickets all the time. So 10 overs 3-75 is more valuable to him because it is speeding the game up than 10 overs 0-12.

    “If I get hit for four though mid-wicket after bowling a leg stump half volley instead of thinking I will put deep square back to cover it I will get a short leg in because I should not be bowling that ball. Hit the pitch harder and nip the ball back.

    “Say Smudge (Steve Smith) hits 30 off 12 balls and gets out. That’s our win. His batting plan in 150 off 320. You would argue the more gaps we can leave him and if he makes one mistake with a fielder in the right place …

    “We went from barely taking 20 wickets in a Test in a year to, in 13 Tests, I think we haven’t done it only once. Things like leaving mid on and mid-off up. If you get hit for six “OK do it again.’’ Hit for six again “OK do it again’’ then do it again “OK, its’ gone straight up in the air. It’s a great little battle. You just have sort of try and forget about economy rates.’’

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  • Hidden stat that gives Starc edge in Ashes race

    Hidden stat that gives Starc edge in Ashes race

    Pat Cummins has delayed naming his first Test side until the toss, but conditions and a surprising set of figures suggest Mitchell Starc could be his man, reports BEN HORNE and DANIEL CHERNY.

    A hidden statistic is giving Mitchell Starc a likely edge in the cutthroat playoff for a place in Australia’s attack for the first Ashes Test at Edgbaston.

    Starc and Scott Boland are believed to have their noses in front of Josh Hazlewood in the crucial battle to line-up alongside fast bowling skipper Pat Cummins and stare down ‘Bazball.’

    Australian coach Andrew McDonald said Cummins was set to announce his XI at a press conference on Thursday night (AEST) in the UK.

    But when given the chance, Cummins said the team would be announced at the toss, even though he said the Aussies had settled on their side.

    Cummins had earlier spoken to Australian media on Wednesday, but stopped short of guaranteeing Starc’s spot in the side with many fearing he’d be the victim of England’s Bazball batting onslaught.

    “We’ll see,” said Cummins.

    Having fully recovered from the side issue that kept him from the World Test Championship final, Hazlewood and fellow paceman Michael Neser both had an extended bowl in the Edgbaston nets on Wednesday afternoon, ensuring the selection panel of George Bailey, Tony Dodemaide and coach Andrew McDonald would need to make an agonising decision about which quick would be squeezed.

    “Joshy Hazlewood obviously comes back into the fold, he looked like he got through that session fine, he should be on the selection table. It’s going to be tough, someone is going to miss out, I don’t think there’s any right or wrong way to go so we’ll see,” Cummins said.

    Boland has barely put a foot wrong since his entry into Test cricket in late 2021 and was the pick of Australia’s pace battery in the WTC final win. Hazlewood has an excellent Test record in England (averaging 23.58 with the ball) but has played just four Tests since early 2021, while Starc – though always a threat – went at more than five runs per over against India and played just one Test on the 2019 Ashes tour.

    Ex-greats including Allan Border and Mark Waugh have declared Boland “undroppable” after starring in the World Test Championship final against India, while there are several signs that point to Starc also being an indispensable force for the first Test against England.

    Despite not having his greatest Test in the WTC final against India, Starc still took a wicket every 41 balls he bowled – a better strike rate than Cummins and Boland.

    That reflects Starc’s overall Test record where he possesses one of the greatest strike rates (49.9) in the history of the game, ahead of a multitude of modern-day greats like Michael Holding (50.9), Mitchell Johnson (51.1), Glenn McGrath (51.9), Brett Lee (53.3) and Morne Morkel (53.3).

    It says that even when Starc isn’t at his best, he still takes wickets at stunning regularity – reflected in his four-wicket performance at The Oval against India.

    Helping Starc’s case to retain his spot is a dry Edgbaston wicket which Cummins predicted could encourage reverse swing.

    While there is some dead brown grass on the pitch, the deck did not appear to be a typical green English seamer.

    “It looks relatively dry, it spun here in 2019, a different time of year, but that looks dry, it’s good weather the next couple of days. Reverse might be a bit more of a factor than I thought it was going to be,” Cummins said.

    “The square looks pretty good, in 2019 all the square was basically bare, it might be a factor, hopefully a bit of spin as well.”

    As well as being Australia’s strike fast bowler, Starc also doubles as Robin to Nathan Lyon’s Batman – helping cultivate the footmarks that can help the off-spinner dominate on tiring surfaces.

    Without Starc, Australia’s lower order batting also looks a little thin – as it did in India when he wasn’t fit for the first couple of Tests.

    Coach Andrew McDonald said he felt Australia had an advantage with lower order batting, at least until England called Moeen Ali into the side as its spinner.

    “He does strengthen that lower order batting. I felt we might have had an edge (in lower batting before his call-up),” McDonald said on SEN.

    There have been some fears raised that England’s Bazball bullies could target Starc.

    However, that thinking goes against Starc’s track record as one of the best white ball bowlers of all time, where he is used to taking wickets with batsmen charging him and trying to hit him over the fence.

    Stuart Broad meanwhile held his spot in the England XI from the side that beat Ireland at Lord’s earlier this month. With Jimmy Anderson and Ollie Robinson returning, it meant there was no spot for speedster Mark Wood.

    Veteran Broad was controversially omitted from the series-opener against Australia at the Gabba in 2021-22 having dismissed Warner seven times during the 2019 series, a campaign in which Warner averaged 9.50.

    Cummins said he therefore wasn’t shocked to see Broad included this time.

    “No huge surprises, Mark Wood was the one you thought might have played, pretty experienced line up,” Cummins said.

    “I didn’t know which way they were going to go, they left out Broad and Anderson at the Gabba a couple of years ago and that caused a bit of a hoo ha so I didn’t know which way they were going to go.

    “I don’t think there’ll be any surprises, they’re guys we’ve played a lot and Davey’s I’m sure been thinking about Broad a lot over the last four years and if he got another chance how he is going to play against him.

    “It didn’t go Davey’s way last time, but I think we’ll see a different Davey this time.”

    ENGLAND XI: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (capt), Jonny Bairstow (wk), Moeen Ali, Stuart Broad, Ollie Robinson, James Anderson

    AUSTRALIA LIKELY XI: David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Travis Head, Cameron Green, Alex Carey, Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins (capt), Nathan Lyon, Scott Boland

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  • ENG vs IRE, Only Test, Day 2 Review: Ollie Pope, Ben Duckett flatten Ireland on second day

    ENG vs IRE, Only Test, Day 2 Review: Ollie Pope, Ben Duckett flatten Ireland on second day

    LONDON – England’s top-order drove home their advantage against Ireland on Day Two at Lord’s as Ben Duckett piled on runs in the morning session before Ollie Pope hit a rapid double-century.

    After declaring shortly after tea, Ireland lost PJ Moor and Andrew Balbirnie in quick succession, slipping to 18-2 before James McCollum left the field hurt. An authoritative hour of batting from Lorcan Tucker and Harry Tector meant Ireland reached 97-3 by the close.

    After quickly eliminating the 20-run deficit they began the day with, England’s batters began to build a lead. Duckett reached his first century on home soil less than an hour into play, flicking a single past short midwicket and raising his fist in the air as he ran through. Three balls later and another single took Pope to fifty, the lead growing at a significant rate.

    As the sun burnt away the early morning cloud, the Ireland bowlers continued to toil. With the break approaching, Duckett and Pope accelerated once more, Pope moving into the nineties with ten minutes left in the session. Duckett passed 150 runs in the same over – prodding the ball into the legside for two.

    He carved yet another boundary from Fionn Hand’s next delivery to bring up the 200 partnership, taking England into the break with a lead of 153, having scored 173 runs in the session.

    Pope got to his century with a scampered single two overs after play’s resumption, while Duckett continued to attack. However, a bowling switch to Hume finally found the breakthrough with a thick inside edge from Duckett. His off stump was flattened, forcing him to depart for 182.

    Joe Root’s arrival at the crease initially meant a period of relative calm, but he and Pope soon upped the ante once more. He raced past 150 as the partnership with Root rapidly rose towards three figures.

    By Tea, Pope was within three runs of a double-century while England’s lead had moved on to 331. The game moved on quickly after the break. Root was bowled by McBrine from the third ball of the session, coming down the pitch and undone by some turn. Pope brought up his double-century, but the very next ball, he too skipped down the wicket and missed, out stumped with Tucker having plenty of time to take the bails off. That was enough for the England captain who recalled his batters with a lead of 352.

    A circumspect start by Ireland’s openers was broken by Josh Tongue’s first ball in the innings. He dismissed Moor lbw to claim his first Test wicket after going without in the first innings. A second came along in the same over as Balbirnie under-edged through to Jonny Bairstow, leaving Ireland 18-2.

    A further blow came when McCollum had to leave the field hurt after twisting his ankle pivoting to play a short ball from Tongue. Paul Stirling came to the crease and looked in imperious form, drilling a couple of boundaries through the off side to move Ireland towards fifty. He became Tongue’s third victim of the evening, gloving behind 45 minutes before the scheduled close of play.

    Tucker and Tector remained determinedly in place to see Ireland to the close without further harm and put some pressure back on to England. Not content to allow Tongue’s short-ball ploy to continue without response, Tector even hooked the debutant for six, while each struck three boundaries. They will resume 255 runs behind with seven wickets in hand.

    MATCH SUMMARY

    England v Ireland, Only Test match, Day Two, Lord’s, 2nd June 2023

    Ireland 172 (56.2 overs; James McCollum 36, Curtis Campher 33, Stuart Broad 5-51)

    England 524-4 dec (82.4 overs; Ollie Pope 205, Ben Duckett 182, Andy McBrine 2-99)

    Ireland 97-3 (26 overs; Harry Tector 33*, Lorcan Tucker 21*, Josh Tongue 3-27)

    England lead by 255 runs

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