Cricket Mar 05, 2026

The Ashes: England cope with the chaos on and off the field to give fans some Christmas cheer in astonishing MCG Test

👤
By Admin
Sports Journalist
The Ashes: England cope with the chaos on and off the field to give fans some Christmas cheer in astonishing MCG Test

Here is a little rundown for you.

England's week has been more eventful than Craig David's in '7 Days' but, like that musician, they were then able to chill on Sunday after beating Australia inside two days of a ridiculous Boxing Day Test to claim a

Ben Stokes' side coped with the pre-match chaos, and then plenty more wackiness throughout the match on a fruity MCG pitch, to win by four wickets.

England have made a litany of errors in Australia, including preparation, shot selection and actual selection, but skipper Stokes probably got things spot-on in the build-up to the rapid Melbourne Test, most tellingly with how he was able to galvanise his team.

He . Stokes knew first-hand how Duckett must be feeling after the Bristol incident back in 2017.

With England being accused of having a drinking culture, Stokes asked for "empathy" for players amid a gruelling schedule, having also had to after his men had tumbled 3-0 down.

After backing his players, his players subsequently backed him, doing enough to outlast Australia in a Boxing Day Test that careered along at breakneck speed and dash the hosts' hopes of a 5-0 whitewash. Glenn McGrath's prediction will now not come to pass.

It would have been easy for England to fold after a which them left them 46 runs behind but they returned the next morning to raze Australia for the second time in the game, helped by some injudicious shots and that helpful surface.

Pursuing 175 on that pitch was never going to be easy but England did so with typical and, on this occasion, wise aggression and there were relatively few jitters. In fact, the most eye-catching moment was probably when Brydon Carse strolled out to bat at No 3.

The experiment did not explicitly work - Carse making six off eight balls - but considering England won the game, it wasn't an epic fail either and perhaps worked in the sense it gave Jacob Bethell slightly longer to prepare before he headed out at No 4 and scored 40.

There was "method to the mayhem", as Stokes put it, adding: "The top order from both teams were struggling to consistently score runs and feel fluency, so we went with someone who's got talent with the bat and a very good eye for hitting the ball.

"It didn't quite come off, but the 15-20 minutes [Carse] spent out there made it a little bit easier for Bethell to build the innings he did."

It was perhaps fitting that the winning runs came off Harry Brook - albeit off his backside as opposed to his bat - when you consider the vice-captain's method of mayhem in the first innings was crucial in England securing victory in this low-scorer.

Brook has played numerous daft shots throughout the series, and we can probably add his wild swipe after charging Mitchell Starc first ball at the MCG to that, but his two outrageous sixes and as many fours in a 34-ball 41 - England's highest innings of the game - proved key. Without that cameo, they may well be 4-0 down.

Brook's knock showed there is a time and a place for Bazball: it makes sense to target quick runs on a pitch where there is likely to be a ball with your name on it soon enough.

It's just a shame England were unable to park that mindset on previous pitches when composure, not chaos was required. They royally stuffed up in Perth and Brisbane.

It was also fitting that Duckett and Bethell were among England's highest scorers in the final innings, with the former having struggled for runs on the field and had his apparent behaviour off it enter the conversation, and the latter spending too much time off the pitch after bursting onto the Test scene in New Zealand last winter.

Duckett looked all at sea - and not in a Noosa holiday kind of way - in the first innings as he spooned to mid-on but creamed 34 off 26 balls in the second, including an audacious ramped six, to get the chase off to a scorching start.

Bethell, meanwhile, rallied from a knock of one on Ashes debut a day earlier with a 46-ball innings of style and substance. Some of his cover driving was supreme. There was a reverse scoop, too.

It is possibly hard to read too much into a score of 40 - much like when a Premier League striker nets a hat-trick against inferior opposition in the FA Cup - but it also doesn't mean nothing and Bethell does bat with an air of authority that the man he replaced in the XI, Ollie Pope, often struggles to locate.

England's management of Bethell, which led to a distinct lack of first-class cricket for the player in 2025 before he was pressed into action in front of 90,000 at the MCG, has been but there is surely no mothballing him now. He looks set for a long run in the team, whether at No 3 or lower.

Victory may not be one to truly savour with the team's Ashes dreams turned to dust by that point, but it did at least give fans something to smile about at last.

After a chaotic series, and an especially chaotic week, England delivered a timely Christmas present.

Australia lead five-match series 3-1

Tags:

cricket news

Share this article

Related Posts

Women's T20 World Cup 2026: England out to 'capture the nation' as Nat Sciver-Brunt looks to replicate Lionesses and Red Roses' success

Women's T20 World Cup 2026: England out to 'capture the nation' as Nat Sciver-Brunt looks to replicate Lionesses and Red Roses' success

England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt hopes her side can "capture the nation" during the 2026 Women's T20 World Cup on home soil this summer.Exactly 100 da...

T20 World Cup: Rehan Ahmed 'adds value' to England after 'upping the ante' in dream debut against New Zealand

T20 World Cup: Rehan Ahmed 'adds value' to England after 'upping the ante' in dream debut against New Zealand

Rehan Ahmed was hailed for upping the ante in a match‑winning performance that saw England pull off a thrilling victory over New Zealand at the T20 Wo...

Alyssa Healy: Australia women's cricket legend ends one-day international career with 158 in win against India in Hobart

Alyssa Healy: Australia women's cricket legend ends one-day international career with 158 in win against India in Hobart

Australian women's cricket great Alyssa Healy ended her one-day international career with a sublime knock of 158 as Australia comfortably beat India i...

T20 World Cup: England take on India in semi-final with Will Jacks firing but Jos Buttler struggling

T20 World Cup: England take on India in semi-final with Will Jacks firing but Jos Buttler struggling

Finishing batting innings has not been a problem for England at this T20 World Cup and that is largely down to Will Jacks.The No 7 has been his side's...

T20 World Cup: England captain Harry Brook on India semi-final, Jos Buttler, Will Jacks and calmness under pressure

T20 World Cup: England captain Harry Brook on India semi-final, Jos Buttler, Will Jacks and calmness under pressure

Captain Harry Brook feels England coming through "niggly" games earlier in the T20 World Cup will stand them in good stead for their blockbuster semi-...

T20 World Cup: Finn Allen hits fastest hundred in tournament as New Zealand hammer South Africa to reach final

T20 World Cup: Finn Allen hits fastest hundred in tournament as New Zealand hammer South Africa to reach final

Finn Allen smashed the fastest T20 World Cup hundred, from just 33 balls, as New Zealand cruised into the final after ending South Africa's unbeaten r...