Never miss a great news story!
Get instant notifications from Economic Times
AllowNot now


You can switch off notifications anytime using browser settings.

Portfolio

Loading...
Select Portfolio and Asset Combination for Display on Market Band
Select Portfolio
Select Asset Class
Show More
Download ET MARKETS APP

Get ET Markets in your own language

DOWNLOAD THE APP NOW

+91

CHOOSE LANGUAGE

ENG

  • ENG - English
  • HIN - हिन्दी
  • GUJ - ગુજરાતી
  • MAR - मराठी
  • BEN - বাংলা
  • KAN - ಕನ್ನಡ
  • ORI - ଓଡିଆ
  • TEL - తెలుగు
  • TAM - தமிழ்
Drag according to your convenience
ET NOW RADIO
ET NOW
TIMES NOW

England stare at whitewash as Australia regain Ashes with ease

The Independent|
Dec 18, 2017, 11.44 PM IST
0Comments
steve-smith-reuters
Steve Smith led the way but this has been a collective success, driven by a collective sense of mission.
Astrong wind swirled around the Waca on Monday afternoon, blowing the Ashes back towards Australia.

The victorious home players embraced on the field; the ground, half-empty after the day's rain, rose to acclaim them. It was 863 days after England had reclaimed the Ashes amid scenes of rapturous disbelief at Trent Bridge. Now, the urn was Australia's again.

It was hard to begrudge them their unconfined joy, and on some level perhaps it was possible even to feel a little envious of the unbridled fervour that Ashes cricket still ignites in this country. This is a contest that still resonates on a national scale, in a way that it has not done in England since most of the current squad were children. And for Australia, winning the Ashes on home soil has been less a sporting challenge and more an article of faith, a rite of passage.

They have played magnificently, with spirit and purpose, intelligence and aggression. Pat Cummins may have taken the final wicket, and Josh Hazlewood may have delivered the decisive spell. Nathan Lyon may have made the key breakthroughs, Steve Smith and the Marsh brothers the centuries.

But this has been a collective success, driven by a collective sense of mission, the belief above all that for all their flaws, it would be England's that were exposed first.

Perhaps these things will become clearer in retrospect, but it seems safe to say that England have been startled by the intensity of their cricket, by their bloody-minded willingness to adopt any tactic necessary for victory, whether it is a stump-mic aside, gritty tail-order runs, a magnificent catch or a game-changing spell. England wanted it, of course they did. But you have to say Australia wanted it more. And so to England.

There have been signs of encouragement, of course. But, by and large, England's collapse has been one authored by their established players.

Alastair Cook has failed to pass 50. Joe Root has failed to pass 100 with the bat. Moeen Ali, England's sole spinner, has failed to provide either penetration or economy with the ball. Ben Stokes failed even to get on the plane to Australia. If the collective has driven Australia's success, it has also driven England's lack of it.

Most tellingly of all, England's identikit pace attack has simply looked bereft when conditions are not helping them. The blame for that cannot be laid squarely at the likes of James Anderson, Stuart Broad or Chris Woakes. They are, for better or worse, the bowlers they are.

The roots of this defeat go deeper than personnel, and when the autopsy finally takes place, it must look beyond headbutts and curfews, beyond nightclub fracas and stray schooners of beer, right into the very skeleton of English cricket.

No excuses can be pleaded, either. England's third defeat in three games may have arrived in slightly farcical circumstances, on a cracked pitch with eccentric bounce.

Torrential rain had seeped through the covers overnight, creating a number of wet patches on a length that England coach Trevor Bayliss described as "unacceptable". Four groundstaff spent most of the morning on their knees tending to the wet patches with leaf-blowers, as if restoring a delicate Renaissance fresco, frequent rain showers despatching them to the pavilion.

The 10am start was delayed to noon, and then to 12.40pm and finally - to Root's evident chagrin - 1pm. Still, a captain who has won all three tosses this series can scarcely complain about fortune deserting them. And there was to be no Christmas miracle for England. The pitch fiasco was a source of mild embarrassment to the Waca, which will not host another Ashes Test after this. But ultimately, the real embarrassment would be England's. Jonny Bairstow's first ball of the day landed squarely in one of the wet patches and cleaned up middle stump around halfway up. England's capitulation, it seemed, had not been averted, only deferred.

The fallout will be prolonged and painful, but England's defeated side have another four weeks of traipsing around this country.
0Comments
Comments
Add Your Comments

Loading
Please wait...