UK View: Poms line up to laud 'Mr Ashes' Broad as Bazball leaves Aussies 'punch-drunk' again

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

England former greats have lined up to pay tribute to Stuart Broad as the bowler confirmed that the final Ashes Test at The Oval will be his last for the national side.

Michael Vaughan and Alistair Cook, who both captained Broad, gave glowing reviews of his time, with Vaughan calling him ‘Mr Ashes’.

“There have been quicker bowlers, more skilful bowlers — but not many cleverer bowlers,” he wrote in The Telegraph.

“And it’s that smartness, together with his relish for the big moments, that have got him over 600 Test wickets. I always thought he could be special — but no one could have predicted that. He’s had such a remarkable career.

“Broad’s been Mr Ashes. If you were ever going to put an England jersey on the wall and you want all your young kids to look up to the jersey and underneath it what it represents — I’d just say Broad.

“The Ashes is the pinnacle for all England players. He’s brought that competitive edge, that strong mentality, that will to win, that drive, the fun — those facial expressions even.

“We even saw that competitiveness with his stunt against Marnus Labuschagne on day two at The Oval. Stuart’s always trying things, always in the contest. He’s everything that you’d want from an England man playing Test cricket.”

Cook described his willingness to get stuck in and improve himself as his greatest quality.

“I scored a double hundred against Stuart Broad at schoolboy level,” he wrote in The Times. “Back then he was a batsman who bowled a bit. If you’d told me then that he would go on to take more than 600 Test wickets, I would have said you’d been out in the sun too long.

“And this is the thing we need to understand. There was nothing pre-ordained about Broad’s rise to the top. Yes, he had the Ashes-winning father and the blond, boyish looks, and he was fast-tracked into the England set-up at the age of 20. Yet throughout his career he has worked bloody hard to show his worth at international level.

“He had to grind away — believe me, I was there. Yes, it was clear from his early twenties that he could bowl, but a match-winner who could sense the big moment and make it his? Even when he and Jimmy were made England’s new-ball partnership on the New Zealand tour, I’m not sure too many thought of him that way.

“But that’s what he became. I have heard people say that they knew when Broad was on a roll because they could see his legs pumping extra hard, the knees rising that little bit more.

“I stood in the slips on many occasions and I must confess I never saw that. What I did see was the look that came over him, the intensity and competitiveness that created an aura around him and a buzz which his team-mates could feed off.

“Another England bowler may come along in the next decade with as much talent, but I will be staggered if we see one who can seize the initiative as he did.”

On the day’s play, it was another that was cast as a battle between old and new forms of Test cricket.

“It was their best batting of the series, and the fullest expression yet of Ben Stokes’s way of playing,” wrote Andy Bull in The Guardian.

“Mick Jagger was watching from the pavilion, and like him, England played all their greatest hits. There was Crawley’s cover drive and Duckett’s late cut. Stokes, playing, for the second time in his life at No 3 because of Moeen Ali’s injury, hooked a six to deep backward square, where Josh Hazlewood dropped it over the rope.

“Harry Brook walloped one down the ground and into the sightscreen. Joe Root played his reverse scoop for six off Mitchell Marsh, and Jonny Bairstow bristled with anger and clumped cuts and thumped pulls.

“In 150 years of cricket, and 250 series, no team has ever scored at more than four runs an over against Australia, not Michael Vaughan’s England, who went at 3.87, not Graeme Smith’s South Africa, who went at 3.66, not Sourav Ganguly’s India, who went 3.09, or Arjuna Ranatunga’s Sri Lanka, Imran Khan’s Pakistan, Viv Richards’ West Indies, Ali Bacher’s South Africa, or any of the rest.

“Until this summer. Stokes’s England have rattled along at 4.74 against them, which is almost an entire run-per-over more than anyone else.”

In The Times, Simon Wilde described the Aussies as ‘punch-drunk’ in his withering takedown of Cummins and co.

“It is hard to remember an Australian team that has looked as passive as this one in the field,” he wrote.

“England may not have regained the Ashes but they have redefined their opponents as much as they have redefined themselves.

“Australian teams are renowned for ferocious competitiveness and intensity in the field; no one scores easy runs off them or is gifted easy wickets. But they increasingly resemble a punch-drunk boxer: not quite on the canvas but needing the support of the ropes.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-31T22:07:25+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I noticed you didn’t have room to go back to 2011 and stopped at 2013. England have won a series in Oz much more recently than you have in England.

2023-07-31T00:53:16+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Yeah I used to think he's a tosser, but actually he's pretty funny, can laugh at himself, and is even mates with Warner (we all sort of assumed they wouldn't get on). He plays the pantomime villain well.

2023-07-31T00:51:11+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


For sure, every “toss of the coin” moment has gone Australia’s way… :laughing:

2023-07-31T00:51:03+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


You're at home. For the last 10 years, this is the pattern - in England it's close, in Australia we clobber you, without a contest. So I think that qualifies as making us "so much better". in England 2023 - 2-1 Australia (so far) 2019 - 2-2 2015 - England 3-2 in Australia 2013-2014 - 5-0 2017-2018 - 4-0 2021-2022 - 4-0 (due to Sydney washout stopping it being 5-0, rain saved England there)

2023-07-31T00:47:02+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


England with Bazball are doing worse at home than they have done for 20 years using traditional tactics.

2023-07-31T00:46:15+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


By contrast, Australia have no moments to rue at all, none. No dropped catches, no silly dismissals etc. None, the whole series. We have played to our limit the whole time.

2023-07-31T00:22:45+00:00

Morgzord

Roar Rookie


Hang on, I think the Poms can very much blame Australia for being 2-0 down. With the pitches they’ve had prepared for them, the rub of the green going they’re way through most of the series and now the rain saving their blushes to avoid going down 3-1, the Poms have had every advantage and have managed one deserved win and one dominant innings… in a five test series. Is this how you all convinced yourselves Brexit was a good idea? Lord!

2023-07-31T00:00:42+00:00

langparker

Roar Rookie


Well TB, maybe he means ‘Mr Moral Ashes’. Quite a few of the comments yesterday haven’t aged well, have they.

2023-07-30T22:51:24+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Broad is a very good bowler and a great competitor. I’ve even come to enjoy his stirring at times… it’s often exactly what we’d expect from an Aussie in the same scenario. That’s probably why he gets the ‘hatred’ from Aussie fans But Mr Ashes is a bit rich. By my count he’s played 40, won 12 and lost 18 with a bowling average of 29 The volume of his work puts him in elite category, but if we were picking all time combined Ashes XI’s, what side would he make? 5ths? Maybe… still a great achievement… but Mr Ashes? Come on…

2023-07-30T21:37:53+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Hahaha… “if those half a dozen different things that happened, didn’t happen, the result would have been completely different” Brilliant !

2023-07-30T14:33:02+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


3-1 is compelling. England has won 3 sessions...maybe 5...out of 60/70 sessions.

2023-07-30T14:16:40+00:00

Aransan

Roar Rookie


England have been lucky with the conditions in the series before now.

2023-07-30T14:14:51+00:00

Aransan

Roar Rookie


Looks good so far. The rain may increase our chances of winning by providing more favourable conditions than we had in the first innings. Good to see Warner return to his usual self and Khawaja is just Khawaja.

2023-07-30T08:36:43+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


We need a miracle & an aggressive Captain leading from the front. The problem is the leader should lead & in turn you morph into that persona. We lack grunt & a bit of mongrel.Let’s hope we bat with an aggressive mindset tonight. :boxing:

2023-07-30T08:33:27+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


You may get them, Don, it’s a good pitch still. But, the idea that you are ‘so much better’ is laughable given how many sessions in this series you’ve been dominated.

2023-07-30T08:31:26+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


If the tracks are so flat, why haven’t the ‘Aussie batting superstars’ we were told to fear and dread piled up the runs? You can criticise ‘flat pitches’ if they produce loads of drawn test matches in a series.

2023-07-30T08:28:01+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Cricket, and sport generally, is always about ‘what ifs.’ That wasn’t really the point of the comment. England have no-one but themselves to blame for finding themselves 2-0 down - and a major part of international sport is about not making silly mistakes. But, the debate was about ‘periods of domination.’ Whether that’s a useful metric is questionable - but I don’t see how anyone can argue that almost every session since midway through the third test has been dominated by England with the tests before that ebbing back and forth. Doesn’t mean the Aussies can’t knock these runs off and win 3-1, though.

2023-07-30T07:19:52+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I expect us to get them if we bat normally. We have batted all series as if we are trying to teach the BazBallers a conservative lesson. Just play cricket and we'll show just how much better we are.

2023-07-30T07:09:19+00:00

Jez North

Roar Rookie


Broad is a legend. I respect him like Kohli in that he plays hard and happy to take pressure off his teammates.

2023-07-30T06:53:44+00:00

Kamikaae

Roar Rookie


The way the Aussies play in the 5th Test, they might as well bowl with a tennis ball , and bat with a baseball bat. A “punch drunk” would punch others in the face, which might be a good thing when you are on the losing end. But here, the Aussies are getting punch in their faces every minute by the raging hordes of English drunks with the ball and the bat,

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar