The Japan Times - Death of Bazball: Five things we learned from Ashes series

EUR -
AED 4.268315
AFN 74.383357
ALL 96.069565
AMD 438.430669
ANG 2.0805
AOA 1065.770893
ARS 1610.859736
AUD 1.673089
AWG 2.093478
AZN 1.935698
BAM 1.959148
BBD 2.34037
BDT 142.928584
BGN 1.986621
BHD 0.438831
BIF 3452.593924
BMD 1.162236
BND 1.490731
BOB 8.029137
BRL 5.986915
BSD 1.162021
BTN 107.846889
BWP 15.803894
BYN 3.455699
BYR 22779.833035
BZD 2.336995
CAD 1.614201
CDF 2655.709813
CHF 0.921212
CLF 0.027081
CLP 1069.176055
CNY 8.003798
CNH 7.989352
COP 4292.824668
CRC 540.253562
CUC 1.162236
CUP 30.799264
CVE 110.453301
CZK 24.521619
DJF 206.924337
DKK 7.471925
DOP 69.912194
DZD 154.160064
EGP 62.369209
ERN 17.433546
ETB 181.439465
FJD 2.623631
FKP 0.881558
GBP 0.871857
GEL 3.12639
GGP 0.881558
GHS 12.782506
GIP 0.881558
GMD 86.005571
GNF 10190.372536
GTQ 8.889154
GYD 243.198205
HKD 9.108923
HNL 30.867952
HRK 7.534319
HTG 152.529218
HUF 382.522792
IDR 19647.605993
ILS 3.645296
IMP 0.881558
INR 108.30288
IQD 1522.160462
IRR 1529357.795973
ISK 144.210321
JEP 0.881558
JMD 183.773297
JOD 0.823989
JPY 184.137177
KES 151.204654
KGS 101.637389
KHR 4649.205977
KMF 498.025366
KPW 1045.946896
KRW 1753.942231
KWD 0.359514
KYD 0.968409
KZT 552.401734
LAK 25609.090581
LBP 104057.817263
LKR 366.304475
LRD 213.22635
LSL 19.51547
LTL 3.431782
LVL 0.703025
LYD 7.411635
MAD 10.854405
MDL 20.469129
MGA 4916.656884
MKD 61.675934
MMK 2441.168262
MNT 4152.347734
MOP 9.382241
MRU 46.357029
MUR 54.381217
MVR 17.979526
MWK 2014.939086
MXN 20.706462
MYR 4.680306
MZN 74.32517
NAD 19.516311
NGN 1605.420575
NIO 42.764376
NOK 11.247845
NPR 172.555565
NZD 2.014254
OMR 0.446881
PAB 1.162046
PEN 4.043032
PGK 5.025481
PHP 69.946895
PKR 324.211215
PLN 4.280086
PYG 7546.800845
QAR 4.236686
RON 5.09652
RSD 117.423041
RUB 93.499543
RWF 1700.601609
SAR 4.36268
SBD 9.346748
SCR 16.101667
SDG 698.503739
SEK 10.890042
SGD 1.489417
SHP 0.871978
SLE 28.532786
SLL 24371.528338
SOS 664.072106
SRD 43.425788
STD 24055.946507
STN 24.54332
SVC 10.167333
SYP 128.714546
SZL 19.509435
THB 37.748856
TJS 11.111665
TMT 4.07945
TND 3.410986
TOP 2.798386
TRY 51.69999
TTD 7.886921
TWD 37.146187
TZS 3010.191905
UAH 50.847466
UGX 4328.528243
USD 1.162236
UYU 47.230519
UZS 14115.063345
VES 550.060735
VND 30607.49505
VUV 139.75194
WST 3.22836
XAF 657.116829
XAG 0.015374
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.141002
XCG 2.09407
XDR 0.826295
XOF 657.071521
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.367942
ZAR 19.48344
ZMK 10461.519739
ZMW 22.397436
ZWL 374.23964
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    0.0050

    75.855

    +0.01%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    15.45

    +2.59%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.3

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    1.1300

    56.32

    +2.01%

  • RIO

    1.8600

    95.15

    +1.95%

  • RELX

    0.1800

    33.33

    +0.54%

  • NGG

    2.2200

    86.82

    +2.56%

  • CMSC

    0.1550

    22.055

    +0.7%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    12.48

    +1.44%

  • CMSD

    0.1700

    22.27

    +0.76%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    15.12

    +0.66%

  • BTI

    -0.6500

    57.82

    -1.12%

  • AZN

    3.2500

    200.47

    +1.62%

  • BP

    -1.2400

    45.76

    -2.71%

Death of Bazball: Five things we learned from Ashes series
Death of Bazball: Five things we learned from Ashes series / Photo: Saeed KHAN - AFP

Death of Bazball: Five things we learned from Ashes series

Australia sealed a thumping 4-1 Ashes win over England with a five-wicket victory in the final Test at Sydney on Thursday.

Text size:

AFP Sport looks at five key takeaways from the series:

- Death of Bazball? -

England came to Australia with genuine hopes of a first away Ashes series win since 2010-11 with their aggressive "Bazball" approach.

But it quickly unravelled on treacherous batting pitches and in the face of consistently good Australian bowling.

They slumped 2-0 down after just six days of cricket with crushing eight-wicket defeats in Perth and Brisbane, and the knives came out for coach Brendon McCullum and captain Ben Stokes.

Former England skipper Michael Vaughan said the gung-ho style was "all becoming a bit too predictable" while long-time BBC broadcaster Jonathan Agnew declared "Bazball is dead."

When Stokes spent more than four hours defying Australia in the first innings of the third Test in reaching his slowest-ever 50 it appeared that the Bazball brand of attacking cricket may well have fizzled out.

- McCullum to face music -

McCullum leaves Australia with serious questions over whether he should keep his job, although Stokes is almost certainly safe.

Head of cricket Rob Key will also have to face the music for a tour marred by claims that England were under-prepared and lacked discipline, with a mid-series beach break and drinking session heavily criticised.

Stokes has urged England chiefs to keep faith with New Zealander McCullum, warning against knee-jerk changes.

"I can't see there being someone else who I could take this team (with) from where we are now to even bigger heights," he said.

"We're both pretty keen on carrying on doing what we are doing."

- Head-spinning -

Australia lost one long-established opener but found another.

When Usman Khawaja suffered back spasms in the first Test at Perth, Travis Head was promoted from five and slammed a rapid-fire match-winning 123.

He stayed at the top of the order for the rest of the series, crunching further swashbuckling centuries in Adelaide and Sydney, with his position now seemingly cemented.

The 39-year-old Khawaja made a successful comeback in the third Test at number four for the injured Steve Smith, but the writing was on the wall and he announced his decision to retire after his 88th Test in Sydney.

Head's opening partner Jake Weatherald failed to fire, with selectors still searching for a settled top two more than two years since David Warner called it quits.

- Australia depth -

Australia's superior bowling depth was on full display during the series, with even a depleted attack able to wrestle England into submission.

Injured pace spearhead Josh Hazlewood played no part at all while Pat Cummins was only able to don the Baggy Green in Adelaide and regular stand-by Sean Abbott was also unavailable.

It was left to the evergreen Mitchell Starc to carry the load and he was ably supported by Scott Boland throughout, with Brendan Doggett, Michael Neser and Jhye Richardson all playing their part.

Stokes admitted they were outplayed by Australia's attack, crediting their "amazing execution" with the ball as key to the series result.

"There's a big difference between what Australia have been able to do with the ball compared to what we've been able to," he said. "We own that."

- Class tells -

The cream usually rises to the top and once again veterans Joe Root and Steve Smith demonstrated why they are in a class of their own.

Root plundered his first century on Australian soil under huge pressure to finally get the monkey off his back and followed it up with another.

Smith expertly captained Australia in four of the five Tests while blasting his own ton.

With 286 Tests and more than 24,000 runs between them, milestones once again fell.

Root joined Ricky Ponting on 41 Test hundreds with only Jacques Kallis (45) and Sachin Tendulkar (51) ahead of him, while Smith's 13th Ashes ton was more than anyone bar Donald Bradman.

Root, 35, hinted in Sydney he could be back for another tour in 2029, while Smith, 36, has given no indication he is ready to up stumps.

T.Kobayashi--JT