England are piecing together their side for next year's Ashes

By Paul / Roar Guru

Joe Root must be a happy man at the moment. Not only is he a proud father again, but his side also scored a recent Test victory in the series against the West Indies.

Just as the World Cup win was a huge high, the Ashes result and the subsequent series loss in New Zealand must have seemed like massive lows. To their credit, the England squad picked themselves up and won three Tests convincingly in South Africa and have continued the good work by winning at Old Trafford.

Coach Chris Silverwood – who last year replaced Trevor Bayliss – got together with Root to work out a two-year plan, which will culminate in next year’s Ashes tour.

The approach they want to adopt means the team aims to bat for longer periods in search of consistently competitive totals and being more patient with the ball. This is a significant shift from the Bayliss era, who wanted the team to show more aggressive with both bat and ball.

In their last seven Tests, the England batting – which was at its nadir, all out for 67 in the third Ashes Test last year – has made four scores in excess of 400 and another of 391/8 declared. This suggests the players are buying into the new plan.

Individual players are also improving, with some developing at a faster rate than others. Burns and Sibley look likely to be Englands openers for some time, with Sibley currently averaging a very healthy 44.33 and two hundreds from his eight Tests.

Ollie Pope has had a slow start to this series but he has still made four scores over 50 in his short career and is averaging a shade under 40. Throw in Joe Root, as well as an in-form Ben Stokes, and this England side has the makings of a handy batting order.

(Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

The bowling attack has found ways to take wickets which again contributed in four recent Test wins. Jofra Archer will be key to England’s attack in Australia in 2021, but it remains to be seen whether the potential he showed during last year’s Ashes will be fulfilled. England’s strength lies in the fast bowling department, with plenty of options to choose from.

Since Graeme Swann retired, England have struggled with spin and Dom Bess is the preferred choice at present. He’s taken 16 wickets at 33.43, a strike rate of 78.6 and an economy rate of 2.54, which is not a bad return for a 23-year-old who’s only played 11 Tests.

There are many reasons to be positive, but there is still a lot of work to be done and Root must be concerned about a few things.

Silverwood still hasn’t settled on who will bat at the crucial number three position. The wicket-keeping spot is also up for grabs, considering Jos Buttler has failed to pass 50 in his last 14 Test innings. His glovework hasn’t been great and he seems to be down on confidence.

The biggest issue has to be who will make up the actual Test squad. The preferred Test team looks like it’s reasonably settled, allowing for rotations in the attack. However, the side doesn’t appear to have a lot of batting depth, outside the incumbents. That becomes problematic if any of these players are injured or have a dip in form.

There’s no doubt Justin Langer and Tim Paine will be watching the current series with great interest. They’ll be observing an England side that is still some way from the finished product, and are likely to see some good young batsmen finding their feet, grinding out runs and laying a platform for their attack to try and take 20 wickets.

Joe Root will be hoping his team continue to learn and improve over the next few Test series. He’ll also be hoping the team can find consistency with the bat and if they can make some decent scores Down Under, there’s every chance the Ashes in 2021/22 will be just as exciting as the 2019 series.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2020-07-24T01:42:12+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Good call. Buttler is obviously dynamic in white ball cricket because, as you say, he can see ball, hit ball on the roads they prepare for those games these days. As you say, it's not the pace of the bowler that worries him, it's the movement. I really rate Foakes. I reckon if given the chance, he could turn into one of England's all time great Test players as a keeper/batsman.

2020-07-23T23:50:46+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Me too! Although strangely, I wonder if Buttler will actually feel more comfortable on flatter, bouncier Australian pitches than he does against the seaming ball in England. He's a see ball, hit ball type of player who could score quickly in benign conditions.

2020-07-23T23:05:20+00:00

Pedro The Fisherman

Roar Rookie


Australia were just 1 decent umpiring decision (or some better bowling and fielding) away from doing just that!

2020-07-23T23:03:45+00:00

Pedro The Fisherman

Roar Rookie


With Brexit in full implementation will Kolpak still be in force?

2020-07-23T13:35:06+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Sorry, I'm not convinced that these guys will become world beaters. They are decent first class cricketers that have had a bit of a decent start before good bowlers work them out. Look at Peter Handscomb for example, I can see Rory Burns trending the same way. This English side is average at best, they prefer and prioritise limited overs cricket and as such they have produced some fantastic short form batters, but in the long format they don't have enough. Sibley has the temperament, does he have the technique? I guess we will find out in 18 months time. Having said all of this, the one thing this England side may have is a bit of pace with the ball, what remains to be seen is whether they can perform in Australian conditions with a Kookaburra ball. The Aussie Attack is a known quantity, it's an excellent attack that covers all bases, can England compete with that.... I'm just not convinced they can.

AUTHOR

2020-07-23T11:11:49+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I hope they don't wake up to Foakes being a better option before the next Ashes James.

2020-07-23T10:28:17+00:00

Cari

Roar Rookie


So England win in four days by over a hundred runs but that is due to playing a poor West Indies side who just happen to beat England in the first Test by over a hundred runs. Are you seriously saying that if a star player moved to Australia he wouldn’t be snapped up by the selectors when he qualified under the rules? pull the other one. I wouldn’t be so keen to dismiss the currant West Indies side as poor. If they can get their star bowler fit they could well spring a few surprises on teams that dismisses them as poor.

AUTHOR

2020-07-23T01:51:25+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


The problem is, there's not much coming through in terms of first class openers, Pedro. It's been that way for a few seasons now. I've no idea what the U19 Aussie openers are like, but the current crop in Shield cricket need to really knuckle down and churn out the runs to challenge Burns or Warner.

AUTHOR

2020-07-23T01:48:52+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


not yet and not at the moment, but they have time to come good.

AUTHOR

2020-07-23T01:48:21+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


You may well be right about Sibley being worked out, but right now he's doing well, certainly better than I expected for exactly the reasons you've mentioned, ie his legside dominance. The other side of the coin is, Sibley might get better and become a more balanced bat, able to score on the off as well as the legside. I remember Greg Chappell was a very one side of the pitch type batsman when he first entered Test cricket but learned how to play all round the wicket. Sibley has 18 months to either get his technique into shape for the Ashes or he's likely to struggle as you suggest

AUTHOR

2020-07-23T01:34:58+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


agreed the current 3 & 4 batted well last summer and I'm also sure the Poms will be trying to work out how to get these guys out, or at least contain them. It's sad that there will be so much pressure on these guys to perform. I really hope we get more production out of numbers 1,2,5 & 6 AND get a few other blokes not in the team into form.

2020-07-23T00:09:24+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Well our opener stocks may be lite, Or even our other spots further down, but they could get Out the opens cheap, they still got to get out our current 3 and 4.

2020-07-23T00:01:39+00:00

Pedro The Fisherman

Roar Rookie


Burns is merely warming a seat until a competent opener arrives (he is not the future). Weatherald ... Wade is also merely holding a spot until one of the young guns emerges. Pucovski ...? The difference is that Australia recognises the shortfalls in the line up (as you have outlined) and is seeking to fix the holes. England thinks that their average players will become competent at Test level, which on current showings is doubtful at best!

AUTHOR

2020-07-22T22:36:28+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


The key piece of the England bowling puzzle is Jofra Archer. Much has been made about his dislike of Kookaburra balls, but so what? It doesn't mean he can't bowl with them and he's still got 18 months to learn to do it well. If he gets it right and Broad does too, the openers are going to be facing some pretty useful heat from both ends. Bear in mind too, if Warner or Burns is out of form or injured, who could replace them? Bancroft? Harris? Renshaw? Our opening batting stocks are as bare as Englands.

2020-07-22T13:24:09+00:00

Brian

Guest


Abbott too old and Rossouw not good enough but would Duane Olivier really be available

2020-07-22T13:22:22+00:00

Brian

Guest


I agree Broad won't worry him however he will be 35 by then and with a guy like Warner who has great hand eye coordination when it goes it goes.

2020-07-22T12:31:14+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Yeh sure, Anything is possible. But just on the history of these two (in Australia against each other and the ashes) Warner hasn’t done bad, but I think Broad in Aus has been ordinary. For it to slip the other way (and anything can happen) there got to be a big change in both’s history in this country against each other.

AUTHOR

2020-07-22T12:07:15+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


All openers are vulnerable early in their innings and Broad will come round the wicket from ball one and there'll be plenty of talk as well. If he gets Warner cheaply a few times in the first Test or two, the pressure will really ramp up on Warner.

2020-07-22T10:10:49+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Do you think warner will be a bunny in Aus though?

2020-07-22T10:03:58+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Yeah, it wasn’t a win for Australia. But for Eng, they couldn’t even win a home series. To that is more telling. And for how great they feel at the moment, yeah super, they beat W.I. -what’s their world ranking? (No offence W.I.), but Eng list the first one didn’t they, at home? That’s telling also.

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