UK View: Stokes an 'untamed rebel who's too stubborn' and Springsteen concert that showed why Pat's the Boss

By Tony Harper / Editor

There’s usually nothing better after a magnificent Ashes win than to luxuriate in a long session of schadenfreude via the apoplectic rage of the UK media. But today something is not quite right.

Yes, we can find delight in remembering Ollie Robinson’s barbed comments about Australia having “three No.11s” – has an Ashes sledge ever backfired so deliciously?- after Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon carried the Aussies home in Edgbaston.

Ben Stokes’ decision to declare on day one, the shocking display from Jonny Bairstow and the travails of poor Moeen Ali, contributed to England’s demise and were well noted by the UK media in the wash up. But the fallout has differed from standard procedure and shown an admirable trend towards perspective.

Oliver Holt, in the Daily Mail, summed up the mood.

“This was just the first Test but it carried enough magic in its five days to last for an entire summer. Some people may tell you only of mistakes that were made or decisions that backfired or catches that were dropped but do not listen to them because this game was about glory,” Holt wrote.

“It was about glory and both teams’ lust for it. It was about England’s daring and it was about Australia’s resilience. It was about England’s determination to seize the game and Australia’s utter refusal to bow to them. It was about the beauty of Bazball and Australia’s defiance of it.”

England’s Ollie Robinson celebrates after taking the wicket of Australia’s Usman Khawaja. (Photo by David Davies/PA Images via Getty Images)

Stokes said after the match that losing “sucks”, but he did his best not to show it.

“It was interesting to watch England in the moments after Pat Cummins hit the winning runs,”observed Andy Bull in the Guardian.

“They didn’t look, or act, like a team who had just lost a game that they probably should have won. Stokes even seemed to be smiling. He slapped Cummins on the back, and wrapped a couple of his teammates up in a hug. England lost one of the most memorable, and entertaining, games of cricket played in this country in a long while, and are now 1-0 down in the series. But, hell, there are four more still to play and, Stokes will be pleased to know, the Met Office is indeed forecasting that the sun will be out tomorrow.”

Jonathan Liew in the Guardian suggested that England were unlucky, but also that Bazball might have distracted them.

“England lost the battle of ideas, but they also lost the battle of the breaks. The rain on the third afternoon came and went at the worst possible time for them, a key period during which Australia claimed both their openers. The fast, flat pitch Ben Stokes ordered was, quite frankly, a mess. The only way of prising out wickets on it was through big turn, big pace or a litany of batting errors. As the margins tightened in the final session, with Moeen Ali failing to appear after the tea break, it became clear they had none of them,” Liew wrote.

“So what do you do? You have to reach for the bag of mystery intangibles. Ollie Robinson’s glare. Stuart Broad pumping up the crowd. Field settings that look more like interview panels. Funky choices, such as Joe Root bowling 13 overs in a row or deciding not to take the new ball until it is too late.

“Often Australia would succumb to the showmanship: Cameron Green and Alex Carey played silly shots to get out. Stokes, trudging in with the old ball to bowl his little 81mph lozenges, cleaned up Khawaja with a brilliantly disguised leg-cutter. But over a long enough x-axis, the arc of Ashes cricket bends towards logic. England had precious little of it when it mattered most.”

Oliver Brown, in the Telegraph, felt some self-reflection from Stokes might be appropriate and went further than any at rolling out some indignation at the defeat.

“From the first moments of this spellbinding five-act play to the last, Stokes embodied both the genius and the recklessness of Bazball,” wrote Brown.

“It was his solemn commitment to entertain that emboldened Zak Crawley to lash the opening ball of the Ashes for four, and Joe Root to ignite the fourth day with an absurd attempt at reverse-ramping Pat Cummins.

“But it was also his hot-headedness that produced England’s less enlightened decisions of this Test: The bizarre first-day declaration before they had even reached 400, the cavalier fashion in which his top-order batsmen gifted their wickets in the second innings, plus the wacky final-day field placements when they had their chance to put Australia to the sword.

“As the leader, Stokes will have no time for all the grumbling Captain Hindsights seeking to second-guess him. It is a tenet of his philosophy that there should be no postmortems or recriminations. He unabashedly trusts his first impulses, and if these turn out to be misplaced, so be it. It signifies quite the sea change from the days when England would be frightened of their own shadows. But you do begin to wonder, after a churning, see-sawing climax to this first Test, if it is a judicious way to negotiate a 6½-week Ashes series.”

Brown said it was on “these margin calls that Stokes has staked his reputation.

Pat Cummins of Australia celebrates after taking the wicket of Ben Stokes. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

“He prides himself on staying impervious to pressure while everyone watching is curled up in the foetal position with stress. When asked if he had any regrets about the funky declaration, the answer, predictably, was a flat no. While staying true to your principles is a core element of captaincy, it can, when stretched to its farthest extreme, start to look like wilful obstinacy.

“And the cold reality is that Bazball, or Benball, or whatever trendy sobriquet you choose, could do with being dialled down a notch.”

Brown also moved to dispel a myth – or at least a narrative thread – that “only England know how to enjoy themselves.”

“At the end of that unforgettable first day, when Stokes was being lauded to the skies for his audacity, Cummins could be found at the Bruce Springsteen concert at Villa Park, oblivious to all the fuss across town. What distinguishes him is that he also understands how to leaven his wilder impulses with restraint, with a measure of cool, deliberate calculation. It is this art that so far eludes Stokes, an untamed rebel sometimes too stubborn for his own good,” Brown wrote.

Over at The Times, former England captain Michael Atherton poured praise on Australia’s captain.

“Australia had the last word. There are many different roads to take in Test cricket, the one well-trodden as well as the one less travelled, and after sticking to their guns with a tried and tested method in the face of England’s all-out aggression, Australia won a pulsating match by the finest of margins,” wrote Atherton.

“Edgbaston 2023, a brilliant, absorbing Test will be inked into the history books as a classic.”

He said Cummins had come out on top in the battle of the skippers, adding “for once in the over-my-dead-body, never-say-die stakes, Stokes had found his match” faced with the “broad-shouldered and full of belief, Cummins”.

But Atherton, too, could see plenty of light.

“What should not be forgotten was that England played some brilliant cricket in this game, making the running against the world champions, and almost breaking them in the process,” he said.

“It is impossible to know what an alternative narrative would look like, but what cannot be doubted is the wholehearted way England threw themselves into the contest. They should be confident of testing Australia again.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-06-23T04:50:50+00:00

Richard POWELL

Roar Rookie


or telling us how he got a knighthood for getting 7 runs.

2023-06-22T11:12:11+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


We can always rely on you matth to set the record straight. . :laughing:

2023-06-22T07:07:26+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Followed by Calgary

2023-06-22T07:03:46+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Isnt Kansas the third test venue?

2023-06-22T07:03:10+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:

2023-06-22T05:58:32+00:00

.kraM

Roar Rookie


Ouch

2023-06-22T04:49:15+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Fair enough but he ain't in Kansas anymore.

2023-06-22T04:41:39+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


If you’ve got 4 slips you bowl to that field but with England's current practice, that may not work. Reverse ramp shots on the first ball of day's play can make that attacking field void. Obviously, this is part of the psychology of the new style of play from England and there is the element of luck that can build momentum - for either team. I don't disagree with you regarding the attacking field but under certain conditions, the damage could be even bigger than what England inflicted in the first innings.

2023-06-22T04:22:49+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Cummins' first look at England 2.0 Stokes seeing Australia as WTC. Boland back to the pack. Smith and Labuschagne four failures. Carey steady, Bairstow wobbly. England's pace bowlers light on. Root a century in a losing cause. Stokes about to lose his mantle. Brook good but not great. Warner did enough "sigh' Bring on Lord's.

2023-06-22T01:25:07+00:00

Sage

Roar Rookie


Should be a headline - " England got more then a bagful of sniff". I like it

2023-06-22T01:25:04+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


I thought about the names & didn’t like the sound of using too much of the captain’s name. :laughing:

2023-06-22T01:12:49+00:00

Ouch

Roar Rookie


How often was Brendan McCullum on a winning team against Australia? once, from 13 attempts

2023-06-22T01:10:59+00:00

Ouch

Roar Rookie


It's being referred to as Cumball by some

2023-06-22T01:06:49+00:00

Ouch

Roar Rookie


I think it was the Sun whose headline was "been kicked in the Bazballs"

2023-06-22T00:33:27+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Where the problem was is that the bowler's didn't bowler's to the field anywhere near like they should've. If you've got 4 slips you bowl to that field. And if you do it well you won't leak runs. There's good stuff about Cummin's but he's poor in marshalling a field. Seeing Smith order the field is dispiriting as it implicitly undermines Cummin's standing. Batting, bowling, camaderie, etc he dies well. But Tactician he ain't.

2023-06-21T22:31:30+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


“Jonathan Liew in the Guardian suggested that England were unlucky” Perhaps they were “unlucky” to lose the toss on a belter of a pitch (wait on, they won the toss). Perhaps they were “unlucky” because their keeper dropped a few catches (even though they know they have a better keeper sitting in the shed). Perhaps the were “unlucky” when they selected a retired off spinner who had a career bowling average against Australia of over 60, hadn’t bowled in red ball cricket for over 2 years and was totally unprepared for test match cricket. Perhaps they were “unlucky” because they held on to a romantic vision of a James Anderson running through the Australian batting lineup when the reality was he should retire with some dignity. Perhaps they were “unlucky” to select a top 3 who’s test averages are artificially inflated because of a few minnows they’ve beaten up. Overall, England got the best of the conditions and were “lucky” that Smith and Labs failed in both innings – something unlikely to happen again this century.

2023-06-21T22:16:37+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


To be honest, if they'd played the old way, we'd have won on day 4.

2023-06-21T11:18:26+00:00

Dodgy brothers

Roar Rookie


I think the declaration was a really bad call, but without his captaincy England wouldn't have even been close to us.

2023-06-21T09:56:02+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


Cracker of a game, I don't know how my body is going to take so many late nights - well played both teams and I can't wait for the remaining tests. :cricket:

2023-06-21T09:17:17+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


What changes you making to the Pom XI for the next test?

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