
'Winning the Ashes would be Stokes' greatest miracle'
England can win the Ashes. They have their best chance of success in Australia since they last won a series down under, back in 2010-11. It is a low bar, mind. In the past 14 years, they have played 15 Tests in Australia, lost 13, drawn two and won none.That chance to win begins and ends with Ben Stokes. If that sounds like hyperbole, consider this: Of the England squad that travels to Australia, none will have ever tasted victory in a Test down under and as few as five will have played a Test there.Between them, they will have one Test hundred on Australian soil, and that will belong to Stokes. Of the two bowlers to have a five-wicket haul in Australia, one will be Stokes, the other Mark Wood. If Wood is fit for November, he will not have played a Test in 15 months.Stokes' task is clear. He needs to recover from a shoulder injury, play like Ian Botham, captain like Mike Brearley, and stay the course. The last part is probably the hardest. He has now not played a full part in any of England's past four Test series because of injuries.He has history of turning water into wine (or whatever he's drinking these days, after claiming to have cut back on the booze). The 2019 World Cup final, the 2019 Headingley Test. Cape Town, the 2022 T20 World Cup final. The angry hundred at Lord's in 2023, Headingley again the same year. Lord's this year.If he pulls this off, and gets his hands on the urn in Sydney in January, it really would be his greatest miracle.
Support will come from Joe Root, Harry Brook and Ben Duckett. It is time for Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope to emphatically deliver on the patience they have been afforded. England's batting looks strong, but they are only an injury from Jacob Bethell, who by November might only have played two first-class matches in 11 months. Jamie Smith will have to show better durability than against India, when he faded badly in his first five-Test series as a wicketkeeper-batter.Who knows which bowlers will have seats on the plane when the music stops. The prospect of Wood partnering with Jofra Archer on a spicy Perth pitch is tantalising, the dream of matching Australia's heavy artillery.In a best-case scenario, they will be supported by Atkinson, Brydon Carse and Josh Tongue, possibly with space for a tearaway bolter. If England really can get their most dangerous weapons to Australia, then they must be managed properly. There is a balance between starting well and making sure there is enough ammunition for the whole campaign.For the spinner, the Liam Dawson debate looks to have been put to bed. Ricky Ponting reckons Shoaib Bashir is the closest thing England have to Nathan Lyon. Enough said.There will be anxiety about England's preparation, or lack of it. They are due to play only one warm-up game before the first Test, against their own Lions team. It is worth remembering England have a habit of winning the first Test of series, and losing the last. Against India, they won the opener for the sixth consecutive series, and lost a fifth finale in six.The biggest challenge will be shutting out the noise that is already coming from Australia. It will only get louder over the next three months. Lyon, Steve Smith and David Warner have piped up. It's only a matter of time before Kylie Minogue, Ned Kelly and Bluey the dog have their say too.There is something about this England team that particularly irks the Australians. They cannot fathom the Bazball way. They respect Stokes, but do not rate New Zealander Brendon McCullum. He won one of his 16 Tests against the Aussies, and fluffed his lines in the 2015 World Cup final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
However, the Australian public can be quick to turn on their own. They did in 2010-11.Australia have questions to answer to over their batting, especially the top three. It currently comprises a fading veteran in Usman Khawaja, a Bazball tribute pick in Sam Konstas and an out-of-position Cameron Green. Beyond that, Smith is the best Ashes batter since Don Bradman, Travis Head is one of the best all-format batters in the world and Alex Carey has recovered from the wobble that followed his 'stumping' of Jonny Bairstow in 2023.The Aussie super-strength is their bowling, the Four Horsemen of captain Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Lyon.If the seamers need back-up, they can call on Scott Boland, with a Test bowling average of 16.53, the best of anyone since 1914. Still, in his two Tests against the Bazballers in England in 2023, he returned 2-231.In short, England have the better batting, Australia the better bowling. Bowlers tend to win series and Australia are at home, so they will start as favourites.But England have Stokes.There are 108 days until the first Test in Perth on 21 November. 108 days of worrying about Stokes' shoulder and hearing Glenn McGrath's score prediction. 108 days of figuring out how to work when sleep deprived and turning down Christmas with the in-laws because it clashes with the Boxing Day Test. 108 days of checking Sheffield Shield scores and hoping Archer doesn't slip in the shower. 108 days of wondering whether England can do it.108 days. Tick, tock.

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


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Assessing Brighton's 'quieter' transfer window
When the transfer window opened, Paul Barber promised a "quieter one" in comparison with recent yet in terms of outgoings, they could be more than some fans would have wanted, given Pervis Estupinan, Joao Pedro and Simon Adingra were among the regular first-teamers to depart this nature of Pedro's move to Chelsea for around £55m with £5m add-ons left a strange feeling for most fans, despite the falling out towards the end of the season. The Brazil striker contributed towards 40 goals in 70 appearances, a significant figure in helping the Seagulls through difficult moments. Replacing his impact will be key to winning games when they do not necessarily deserve has been replaced by the incoming Maxim de Cuyper. De Cuyper likes to drive the ball from deep and invert into space and who could be one to watch under Fabian Hurzeler's new system. Utilising both full-backs going forward and for defending deep has become essential at the top level of global football. The latter attribute could be the potential downside in the Belgian's will want to ensure they do not get caught on transition too often this season. Losing runners like Estupinan and Pedro could cause issues given incoming defenders Olivier Boscagli and Diego Coppola are better suited to distributing forwards and last-ditch defending the other end of the pitch, Evan Ferguson's loan-to-buy move to Roma could come under scrutiny, but then Brighton have spent close to £60m on Charalampos Kostoulas and Stefanos Greek teenage duo are settling in, but the fees paid will always invite pressure to return goals. After all, Brighton had the most goalscorers in the league (18) last told, there remains an overwhelming feeling of optimism. Once again, the push for Europe is more from Ryan Adsett at Talk Seagulls, external


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Vacant chair role at Lancashire 'appeals' to Lloyd
David Lloyd says he would be interested in taking on the vacant role of chair at Dame Sarah Storey is currently in the position on an interim basis following the departure of Andy Anson last month after nearly five years in the and radio broadcaster Lloyd was a player, captain, and head coach of Lancashire before becoming England's head coach nearly 30 years Lloyd remains passionate about his county and is still a regular at Emirates Old asked if the role of chair would appeal, the 78-year-old told BBC Radio Lancashire: "It's a complicated issue, but yes it would. "I think I can make a difference and I'd like to have an involvement." 'Reignite the club' Lancashire are sixth in Division Two of the Championship with three games to go and promotion back to the top division looks unlikely following relegation last the expansion of the hotel at the ground and large music concerts staged most summers, it has been suggested that county cricket has taken a back seat in importance in recent is a perception that Lloyd, affectionately known as 'Bumble', believes he could change."You've got to be hands-on as cricket chair," he said. "You've got to be there almost every day and know the people on reception, the cleaners, to build that culture within the club that you are very dynamic."We've got a great opportunity at Emirates Old Trafford right now to reignite the club if you like, to bring it back into line as a cricket club and not an arena or a stadium."As someone steeped in Lancashire's history since making his debut for the first-team in 1965, Lloyd says that he would love to give something back."Lancashire Cricket Club has given me every opportunity in life and I feel that I can help in some way," he said."It's complicated because there's a business side of the board and that's not my forte. But cricket is."


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Two uniting characteristics in Chelsea fans - relentless and demanding'
There are many sides and characteristics to the Chelsea getting to know these people over 10 years covering the club, it would be fair to describe two uniting characteristics: relentless and sell out nearly every week for both men's and women's matches, and supporters turn out even at academy supporters are also very influential at the club. The fans uniquely own the pitch at Stamford Bridge - through the organisation Chelsea Pitch Owners - giving them some leverage when criticising the club, arguing for cheaper ticket prices and, most directly, an ability to control what happens with the stadium is pride that protests at the stadium a few years ago led to the so-called big six making a U-turn on joining the Super the fanbase is among ones to put the most pressure on certain players or managers, that is out of a demand to win matches and trophies. It must be said, the atmosphere isn't always great at Stamford Bridge, which again is influenced by expectation and simply being a big is not to say there is any disloyalty. Blues fans travel in great numbers, with some supporters showing up even to follow the team in Kazakhstan during last season's Conference League will be louder next season as fans are increasingly convinced by Enzo Maresca and, to an extent, this project under Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital's ownership. They will also be back in the Champions League - and that's where the fanbase has always been at its of the supporters I could highlight include Cathy, who has not missed an away match for 47 years, Terry Komatsu, who relocated from Japan to London purely to be close to the club, and Basil Goode, described as a Chelsea Women superfan on the club's own website and one you can hear chanting loudly at Kingsmeadow is these people that make a matchday and enrich my role covering the club on a daily us your pictures and stories here