
England ease off Bazball big talk but continue to embrace thrill of the chase
Sports writers love a Churchillian speech that precedes a mind-bending feat. Take three years ago, when word got back that Brendon McCullum had told his England players to 'run towards the danger' at Trent Bridge before Jonny Bairstow vaporised a target of 299 against New Zealand. It was like ruddy catnip for the press corps.
And this time, after reeling in 371 at Headingley at a breezy 4.5 runs per over and with 14 overs to spare? Apparently very little was said in the dressing room beforehand beyond 'bat the day, win the game' or Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett deciding between them to ignore the target and just 'play like it was day one'.
Not nearly so sexy, admittedly, but perhaps in its own way just as instructive. It may just be that after three years of McCullum and Ben Stokes unstitching some old-world English thinking about chasing – pressure, historical precedence, securing the draw before turning thoughts to the win – we are now witnessing the upshot: a team with such clarity in these situations that sabres no longer need to be rattled.
'My mindset personally was a bit different to what it has been over the last couple of years,' admitted Duckett, his match-winning 149 from 170 balls having begun with caution against the obvious threat of Jasprit Bumrah. 'It was potentially a bit of maturity from me kicking in, trying to see [Bumrah] off, not necessarily playing any big shots, and knowing it would get easier.
'And massive credit to Zak [who made 65 in an opening stand of 188]. The way he played, I took my hat off to him. He is definitely thinking about batting differently now. He's still smacking the bad ball away but his thought process is so calm.'
It does feel like the project as a whole has gone this way a touch of late; that the big talk has not only receded in public – as per Rob Key's directive – but also eased off behind closed doors. There were still moments when aggression tipped into self-harm, like Jamie Smith holing out on day three with the second new ball moments away. But at the back end of the chase, 69 to win, Smith fed off Joe Root's typically low heart-rate at the other end and played a gem for his 44 not out.
This is where the naysayers will interject, of course, pointing to the rash of catches India grassed across the match, a pitch that stayed largely true to the end, plus another season of Dukes balls that seem to need changing more often than a newborn's nappy. Just like the one-day team under Eoin Morgan that stuck an extra run on established scoring rates between 2015 and 2019, England being the team to shift the dial tends to invite a fair degree of scepticism and caveats.
The drops? Well, England put down a couple of costly ones themselves. Pitches that suit Bazball? At Headingley such surfaces predate the Stokes-McCullum axis when you remember Shai Hope's magnum opus in 2017. Even with a few sliding doors moments, not uncommon over five days, this victory was still pretty remarkable. And not just the run chase either, but for England surviving two slogs in the field as India chalked up five centuries. Not long ago, shoulders would have slumped here.
Alastair Cook admitted as much afterwards, telling Test Match Special that had he won the toss and seen the opposition reach 430 for three – India's position mid-morning day two – players would have been questioning his judgment internally. But not so this current bunch under Stokes, who, to pinch a line from his own Headingley heist in 2019, seem to 'never, ever give up'.
Sign up to The Spin
Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action
after newsletter promotion
Granted, there have been some messy implosions along the way, the likes of Lord's during the 2023 Ashes or Rajkot last year. But the 835 runs that India scored across the two innings in Leeds was the fourth highest total conceded by a team that has gone on to win. Under Stokes and McCullum, England are also second and third on this list after the 847 runs shipped in Rawalpindi in late 2022 and 837 during that 'run towards the danger' Test in Nottingham six months earlier.
After an England win there is usually still a talking point or two as regards selection for the next Test and with Jofra Archer on the comeback trail at Chester-le-Street these past four days there may well be again. But go down from one to 11 and every incumbent contributed to this 1-0 lead. Even Shoaib Bashir did the thing folks thought beyond his current stage of development, the rookie holding an end in the first innings when the seamers struggled to locate the right length.
Chris Woakes, you say? He has clearly had better games with the ball and, aged 36 with the body possibly starting to creak, it is taking him longer to get up and running. But then consider his 38 in England's first innings, repelling the second new ball and one half of three partnerships worth a combined 111 runs. It may not have been headline-grabbing stuff but it was still utterly central to the cause. And not least considering India's Nos 8-11 managed just nine runs between them in the match.
It is here where the tables have been turned since England's 4-1 defeat in India last year, a tour that had the locals scratching their heads as to why the visitors kept compromising their ability to take 20 wickets by insuring themselves against a lengthy tail. As counterintuitive as it sounds after Josh Tongue razed their lower order twice, India would be better served playing their best four wicket-taking bowlers plus Ravindra Jadeja – and making sure the catches start to stick.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Powys County Times
10 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
Harvey Elliott brilliance clinches England Under-21s place in Euros final
Harvey Elliott spectacularly fired England Under-21s to the European Championship final as they moved one win away from becoming back-to-back champions. One year on from the men's senior team beating the Netherlands in the Euros semi-final, the Young Lions followed suit, with Elliott's second-half double earning a 2-1 win in Bratislava. The 22-year-old, a Premier League champion with Liverpool, scored both goals, first putting his side ahead just after the hour and then firing a superb 86th-minute winner after Noah Ohio had levelled for the Dutch with his first touch. Lee Carsley's side will meet Germany or France in Saturday's final when they will hope to retain the crown they won two years ago. Victory was fully deserved in searing heat in Slovakia as they were the better team throughout, with the Dutch goal coming out of nothing. Carsley's men almost took the lead in the fourth minute. Omari Hutchinson caused trouble down the left and sent in a low cross to Elliott at the far post, but the midfielder's low shot was brilliantly saved by the outstretched leg of Dutch goalkeeper Robin Roefs. Roefs denied Elliott again in the 12th minute as England piled the pressure on, again staying big to deny a low shot after Jay Stansfield's cutback. The Young Lions stayed on top but the chances dried up until a brilliant move just before the break, when James McAtee set Hutchinson free, he played in Elliott whose cutback was perfect for Alex Scott, but the Bournemouth midfielder's shot was deflected over. The Netherlands, who failed to have a shot in the first half, improved after the break and began asking questions. They tested James Beadle for the first time just before the hour when Aston Villa full-back Ian Maatsen drilled a 25-yard shot through a crowd of bodies, but the goalkeeper was equal to it. Just as England were being pushed back, they went ahead in the 62nd minute. Elliot Anderson set Elliott clear, he advanced into the box and fired a fine right-footed finish in at the near post. But the advantage was short-lived as Ohio made the perfect impact from the bench. Moments after coming on, the former Manchester United and Manchester City academy player scored with his first touch. He latched on to the ball after Charlie Cresswell miscontrolled, spotted Beadle out of position and shot first time from the left wing into the near post. But England were not going to be denied and some Elliott heroics sent them into the final for just the second time since 2009. He picked the ball up 30 yards out, turned his marker, beat another man and advanced into the penalty area before whipping a low shot into the bottom corner.


The Sun
16 minutes ago
- The Sun
Chelsea have ALREADY paid off Liam Delap transfer fee with Club World Cup earnings alone
LIAM DELAP is off the mark - after putting Chelsea in the black. Or at least in terms of the striker's £30million arrival from Ipswich just three weeks ago. 3 3 Delap angled his first goal for the Blues as a 3-0 win over ES Tunis booked a place in the Club World Cup knockout stages. And reaching the last 16 means Chelsea have already earned £33.8m from the controversial tournament. That more than covers the 22-year-old's transfer fee. Admittedly, the £3.8m extra that the Blues have so far picked up in the CWC won't stretch much beyond paying the first half a year of Delap's sizable salary. The former England Under-21 star signed on at Stamford Bridge until 2031 for around £100,000 a week - £5.2m every 12 months. Chelsea didn't even have to break sweat in the fierce heat of the USA to make the opening £25m from the CWC. WATCH EVERY MATCH OF THE CLUB WORLD CUP 2025 LIVE ON DAZN 3 Because that sum was just for participating in the 64-team tournament. The Blues then got nothing in more senses than one in their first Group D clash as Flamengo roared back to triumph 3-1. But victories over Los Angeles and Tunis scooped £1.5m each. That's £3m - with a further £5.8 m added on for making the KO phase. Fans convinced Chelsea have 'scammed their way to Club World Cup final' after Harry Kane's horror last second miss Cold hard cash - after bringing in a forward known for his bold, hard play, something akin to an old-fashioned targetman. Delap revealed he's relishes that bash-and-grab side of the gam e. He said: "Yeah, I love those battles. I always have since I was a kid. "I really love the aggressive side of it and the competitive nature of the squad. "It's got to be controlled at times but it's my game ultimately and I enjoy it." And he's also far from fazed at Chelsea handing him the No.9 shirt. Big-name stars Fernando Torres, Radamel Falcao, Alvaro Morata, Gonzalo Higuain and Romelu Lukaku all struggled for the Blues in that TOP. But Delap told talkSPORT: 'I chose it. At the end of the day, it's just a number on the back of your shirt. "The number nine has always been related to strikers, so it's something I like, but there is no pressure. "It's too early of course to judge if Delap will be a hit with that top. But financially, his numbers are already more than adding up for Chelsea.


The Guardian
16 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Taylor Hinds to leave Liverpool Women after five years and join Arsenal
Arsenal are to sign the Liverpool vice-captain Taylor Hinds on a free transfer when her contract expires at the end of June, with the 26-year-old having decided to join the European champions. The left-back played for Arsenal as a youngster before joining Everton in 2018 and then moving across Merseyside two years later. She has spent the past five years with Liverpool, helping them finish as high as fourth in the Women's Super League in 2024. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion The Jamaica international, who represented England at youth international level, is understood to have been offered a new deal by Liverpool but, while they will naturally be disappointed to lose a senior player, they understand and respect her decision to move to play Champions League football next season. Hinds was a key part of the Liverpool team that won promotion to the WSL with the second-tier title in 2022, and she played in every league game for that season and the following top-flight campaign. The addition of Hinds strengthens Arsenal's options at full-back, on both sides, because although she has predominantly played on the left, she is also capable of providing cover as a right-back or right wing-back. Meanwhile, the Arsenal full-back Laura Wienroither – who can also play on both sides – has been linked with a move away following her loan spell at Manchester City in the second half of last season. Hinds received widespread praise and support in March after she spoke up about being subjected to 'sexually inappropriate comments' from a spectator during Liverpool's Women's FA Cup win at Arsenal. The incident occurred while Hinds was receiving treatment on the pitch and a member of the crowd was removed from the stadium by stewards. Both clubs offered her their 'full support', while Hinds said at the time: 'Together we can continue to make our sport better both now and for the years to come.' Meanwhile, Liverpool are understood to be getting closer to appointing a new manager, having been without a long-term replacement for Matt Beard since his departure in February.