Daily Mail - 27.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1
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Daily Mail, Tuesday, August 27, 2019

73


GREATEST


ASHES


TESTS


G


(^5) BY LAWRENCE BOOTH



  1. HEADINGLEY 2019


IT IS over a century since a
team won a Test after being
bowled out for as few as 67
runs. And only once before
has a higher 10th-wicket
stand taken a side to victory.
That’s before we get to the
very human details of Ben
Stokes’s guts and skill, Jack
Leach’s glasses, Tim Paine’s
review and Nathan Lyon’s
fumble. For sheer drama,
we have a new name on
the leaderboard.


  1. EDGBASTON 2005


And what a game it has pushed
into second place. Australia
needed three to win when
Steve Harmison had Michael
Kasprowicz caught down the
leg side by Geraint Jones. The
drama was heightened in those
pre-dRS days by the fact that
Kasprowicz’s glove was off the
bat handle, but England
weren’t complaining. Instead
of going 2-0 down, which would
inevitably have led to a ninth
successive Ashes defeat, they
ended up winning the mother
of all Test series 2-1.


  1. HEADINGLEY 1981


FOR years, the Test to end all
Tests. Ian Botham slogged an
unbeaten 149 as England
followed on, then Bob Willis
charged in on his wonky
knees to take eight for 43.
Many details remain
legendary: England’s players
checking out of their hotels
early in expectation of
defeat, Australians Rod Marsh
and Dennis Lillee taking up a
bookie’s odds of 500-1 against
an England win, and Richie
Benaud’s commentary
during the Botham blitz:
‘That’s gone straight into
the confectionery stall —
and out again.’


  1. THE OVAL 1882


THIS was the Test that gave
rise to the Ashes. England,
needing 85 to win, reached
51 for two before collapsing
to 77 all out, with Frederick
Spofforth — enraged by the
gamesmanship of WG Grace —
taking seven for 44. next day,
the Sporting Times printed a
mock obituary of English
cricket, but later that year an
England side captained by Ivo
Bligh took revenge down Under.
Bligh was presented with an
urn containing some ashes (of
a ball, a bail or maybe even a
veil) and a legend was born.


  1. MELBOURNE 1982


ANOTHER close one that went
England’s way. Needing 292
to retain the Ashes, Australia
slipped to 218 for nine,
before Allan Border and Jeff
Thomson embarked on a
partnership that held two
nations in rapture and ended,
agonisingly, on 288 when
Thomson slashed Botham
into the slips. Chris Tavare
juggled the catch, but Geoff
Miller was alert to the
rebound and England had
won by three runs.

the chat from now on has to be all
about Ben Stokes.

NEWMAN: To cricketing great-
ness. To become the best all-
rounder in the world and the best
England have ever had. To fulfil all
that potential he was in danger of
throwing away on that dark night
in Bristol. To inspire children to
take up the game, as Ian Botham
did to me and so many others all

those years ago. And to create
that same sense of awe I still feel
whenever I bump into Sir Beefy in
various media centres around the
world, because ‘it’s Ian Botham!’
Stokes is capable of all this now
and more.

BOOTH: Onwards and upwards.
He’s still only 28, but he’s kept
himself in better physical shape
than England’s two other larger-

than-life all-rounders, Botham
and Flintoff, and he has a real love
for the game and his team-mates.
Stokes is the real leader in this
Test team, but vice-captain is
where he should remain: imagine
how many overs he would bowl if
he was in charge. now that he’s
got Bristol out of his system, he
can be as good as he wants to be
— or, possibly, as good as the ridic-
ulously packed schedule allows.

HUSSAIN: I think Stokes will
carry on doing exactly what he’s
been doing. He’ll train just as hard,
and he won’t get big-headed. He’ll
remain an incredibly popular team
man. The only question is how he
gets looked after, which will be a
debate for the ECB and his man-
agement company. Yes, he
deserves to make big bucks at the
IPL, and he’s probably just added
another ‘0’ to his contract, but
they will need to keep a careful eye
on his workload. He’s an all-
rounder in all three formats, and
we have to make sure he doesn’t
burn out, like Botham and Flintoff
before him.

WHAT SHOULD
ENGLAND DO NOW?

HUSSAIN: The big question is
the fitness of Jimmy Anderson. If
he gets through enough overs
before the fourth Test, and both
he and the medical staff think he’s
fit to play at Manchester, then he
fits into the equation ahead of
Chris Woakes. But we can’t afford
a repeat of Edgbaston. In terms of
the batting, I’ve said all along
that I’d like to move Joe denly up
to open, promote Stokes to
no 4 and allow Jason Roy to go in
at no 5.

LLOYD: Will Anderson be prop-
erly fit? It’s a risk, especially after
Edgbaston. What he needs is
proper mileage in his legs, not
some two-day second-team exhi-
bition game. And if Jason Roy was
good enough two Tests ago, he’s
good enough now. We can’t just
keep jettisoning players. The only
possible change I’d consider is
bringing in dawid Malan for Joe
denly, but I’m inclined to stick
with the same side.

BOOTH: Two players are looking
a bit weary: Jos Buttler and Chris
Woakes. They’ve both had emo-
tionally draining summers, and
there’s no shame in giving them a
game or two off ahead of the
winter. I’d give Ollie Pope a go at
no 6 (not at no 4, where he batted
in two Tests last summer against
India), and Sam Curran at no 8.
There’s talk about Jimmy Ander-
son, but are they going to risk him
after Edgbaston? Plus, the tail
would then consist of two no 10s
and two no 11s. That could
prove costly.

NEWMAN: We cannot just think
everything is rosy in the England
garden now. Yes, they can bat
properly, but they have to go on to
win the Ashes now and I’d make
some tweaks. The experiment
with Jason Roy at the top of the
order was worth a go but it hasn’t
worked and I’d move him to the
middle order. Chris Woakes and

Jos Buttler still look to be suffer-
ing from a World Cup hangover
and I would take them out of the
firing line. And, sorry Jonny, but
Ben Foakes to come in and take
the gloves. He is a proper Test
cricketer and deserves another
shot. Ollie Pope and Sam Curran’s
time will come.

WHAT ABOUT THE
AUSSIES? HOW DO
THEY RECOVER FROM
HEADINGLEY?

BOOTH: Captain Tim Paine
talked a good game on Sunday
evening, saying Australia could
have won all of the first three
Tests. And he’s right. So the fact
that it’s 1-1 may leave them with
the kind of sinking feeling they
experienced in 1981 and 2005.
nathan Lyon, in particular, will
have to pick himself up, though
not many English cricketers will
be shedding a tear for him. The
return of Steve Smith changes the
dynamic once more, and he should
replace Matthew Wade, who has
only a help-yourself hundred in
the second innings at Edgbaston
to his name.

NEWMAN: It will be very tough
for Australia to come back from
this, and England’s job is to make
sure they don’t. Who knows
whether Steve Smith will be quite
the same when he comes back but
there are two clear candidates for
him to replace in Usman Khawaja
or Matthew Wade. All the pressure
is on the Aussies and a captain in
Tim Paine whose leadership was
as dodgy as his batting in Leeds.
Mitchell Starc will play on the
quickest pitch in the series, which
is not over yet. But I stand by what
I said the moment the Lord’s Test
was drawn. And what I wished I
hadn’t said when they were bowled
out for 67 on Friday. England will
win the Ashes.

LLOYD: Australia will be reeling.
They messed up a run-out and
used up their reviews, although I
still think that lbw shout against
Stokes was sliding down the leg
side. Hawk-Eye doesn’t seem to
have picked up the fact that it
deviates after hitting his front pad.
As for nathan Lyon, people will
think back to the moment when
he dropped the ball on AB de
Villiers after he was run out in a
Test in South Africa. For me,
Smith comes in for Khawaja.

HUSSAIN: Australia’s issues will
be psychological. They still have a
fantastic bowling attack, and they
know all about England’s batting
frailty. But they have to put Head-
ingley behind them. Mitchell Starc
should come in on what is expected
to be the quickest pitch in the
series, probably for James Pattin-
son, although they may decide
that Pat Cummins needs a rest.
And Steve Smith plays instead of
either Travis Head or Matthew
Wade. Usman Khawaja has enough
credit in the bank to survive. Tim
Paine’s a problem — both because
of his lack of runs and his poor
reviewing — but they’re not
dropping the captain.

genius... but we


doesn’t burn out


HUSSAIN’S ENGLAND TEAM: Burns, Denly, Root
(capt), Stokes, Roy, Bairstow (wkt), Buttler, Archer,
Broad, Leach, Anderson.

BOOTH’S TEAM: Burns, Roy, Root (capt), Denly, Stokes,
Pope, Bairstow (wkt), Curran, Archer, Broad, Leach.

NEWMAN’S TEAM: Burns, Denly, Root (capt),
Bairstow, Stokes, Roy, Foakes (wkt), Archer, Broad,
Leach, Anderson.

LLOYD’S TEAM: Burns, Roy, Root (capt), Denly,
Stokes, Bairstow (wkt), Buttler, Woakes, Archer,
Broad, Leach.

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