Stuart Broad has revealed his heated exchange with Pat Cummins in the aftermath of the Jonny Bairstow stumping incident during the Ashes at Lord’s in which the English seamer called him an “absolute disgrace” and the Australian captain fired back at him about his record of gamesmanship.
A few days after Bairstow’s quotes for an upcoming book reignited the debate of Alex Carey’s controversial dismissal of the England keeper during the second Test, Broad has detailed how when he walked out to bat soon after the incident that he sledged Cummins about not rescinding their appeal.
Broad said after he heard the appeal from the middle, he quickly looked at a replay of Bairstow being caught out of his ground and thought he would not be sent on his way because the ball was dead.
“Saw it on the TV, ‘Nah, no way is that out’. Sat back down and then I heard a huge boo. I was like ‘what’s happened there?’ and I think Baz (coach Brendon McCullum) went ‘oh he’s been given out’ and I’m like ‘you’re joking’,” he recalled on the Up Front podcast.
“What set me off is I walked through the Long Room which is normally like ‘good luck, have a great …’ and one of the members was looking out the window and just turned around to me and goes ‘absolute disgrace!’.
“I would say mindset’s a strength of mind and I’ve learned to be very controlled with what I’m doing but that word just turned me into … I just had red mist for 10 minutes.
“So I walked past Jonny and normally the out batter you’d go ‘What do you think, is it swinging mate, how are you feeling?’ He was just snorting, staring at the floor like a raging bull. Didn’t even look at me and that revved me up as well.
“So as I’m walking out to bat at Lord’s and there’s boos going at the Aussies, the captain Pat Cummins is coming on to bowl so he’s walking towards me to the end of his mark.
“And I just looked at him and said, ‘You’re an absolute disgrace’. He said, ‘Oh yeah, you’re hardly an upkeep of the spirit of cricket’.”
Cummins was clearly referencing Broad’s decision not to walk in an Ashes Test in 2013 despite nicking the ball to first slip and being given not out.
“So that upset me a bit,” Broad added. “So then the next 10 minutes became me being very facetious and shouting in every time which I had huge regrets about that night. I was hugely embarrassed about it but I had no real control over what I was doing.”
Broad added that he eyeballed two close-in fielders and joined in the singing of “Same old Aussies, always cheating” that was reverberating around the usually genteel ground.
He also revealed Stokes told him to “keep doing your thing” of agitating the Australians because it appeared to put them off their game.
“Pat went over to long-on, way away from me and the crowd are booing him when he walked out and I’m shouting from 60 metres ‘Pat, Pat, all these boos, they are for you, mate. All of them’,” he added with a trademark smirk.
“Started off as a red mist and then I tweaked it into an advantage of we’ve got them by the balls here a little bit, how long can I make this carry on?
“It made the series, to be honest. We galvanised around it.”
Australia went on to win the second Test in a thriller and despite England getting up in two of the final three matches, the tourists retained the Ashes by virtue of their 4-0 cakewalk Down Under in 2021-22.
Broad also conceded that Bairstow didn’t leave his crease during a live-ball situation again for the rest of the series so “he realised maybe I was a bit dozy at times just wandering out”.
In an extract published earlier this week by the UK Telegraph in a soon-to-be-released book “Bazball: The inside story of a Test Cricket Revolution”, Bairstow told author Nick Hoult that he thought Carey had set a bad example by stumping him when he started wandering out of his crease thinking the over had been completed.
“The decision was that I was out, and I moved on,” Bairstow said. “I’ve not brought it up since. I’ve kept quiet. It’s on them. If that’s how they want to go about it and win a cricket game or what have you, then so be it.
“If you’re starting in your crease, then it wouldn’t even enter my mind to do that.
“I’ve never seen it happen from someone starting in their crease. I don’t think you want that filtering down into kids’ cricket.”
He has since copped more ridicule given there was also a similar incident earlier in the Lord’s Test when Bairstow had a ping at the stumps when Marnus Labuschagne was batting but he claimed that was a different set of circumstances because the Australian star was batting out of his crease.
And footage also emerged of Bairstow involved as the wicketkeeper in a similar incident in a county game in 2014 when he stumped Samit Patel well after the batter thought the ball was dead.
Barb Dwyer
Roar Rookie
Australians also don't appeal for this.
Barb Dwyer
Roar Rookie
By legitimately stumping someone? Which Bairstow had already done?
Barb Dwyer
Roar Rookie
He did it plenty of times afterwards.
Wikipetia
Roar Rookie
ok (where would you rank him in our recent test keepers? i'd have him below all of Healy Paine Marsh Gilchrist Wright Nevill, and above Wade. not demonstrably better than Carey.)
JamesH
Roar Guru
The guy with the most dismissals ever in a test series couldn't keep? Okay. It's because it was a huge deflection. No keeper was taking that
andyfnq
Roar Rookie
PLAY TO THE F*ING RULES AND DON'T HAVE A CRY WHEN YOU ARE OUT. MISERABLE IGNORANT WHINGING POMS
No9
Roar Rookie
Perhaps I should add that Bickel was not party to that combined appeal as replays show . As he said after bowling that ball my head was still down and I didnt see the ball passing the bat . I accept that as replays show .
No9
Roar Rookie
It depends what you define as a signicant match . Does that include English County championship matches .. Sheffield Shield ? Cowdrey was a walker although the Australians always thought it was only when it suited him and the result was clear . I have seen him walk . The Rev. David Shepherd was a walker .I have seen him walk . Traditionally English county players were walkers if they were ( oddly ) professionals . Not to walk when a fellow profesional got you out was taking the bread out of a fellow professional's mouth . Wisden records that . Yes , Gilchrist walked not against England but... Sri Lanka ! He was upbraided by his captain and his team mates for that . Don't do that again , they said . To my knowledge he never did .
No9
Roar Rookie
I have seen Australian batsmen pick up the ball when it was still alive and return it to the fieldsman . I can't recall an appeal ffor handling the ball . Perhaps that will now change ...sadly .
No9
Roar Rookie
One incident that always annoyed me is Second test MCG 2001 Kallis bowled Bickel . You might say just an umpiring blunder . Why then did every Australian on the field go up ? Even down at deep fine leg . It was clear to most that the Australians had rehearsed a total team appeal when Kallis missed outside off It worked . Kallis out when he missed it by six inches. Even the Members were silent .
Panthers
Roar Rookie
I think he’s full of crap. :laughing: :thumbup:
matth
Roar Guru
Or ‘Same old England, always losing’
matth
Roar Guru
Nah Broad just likes a stoush. He’s entertaining and he can back it up
matth
Roar Guru
Yeah the revolution was getting the same result as the time before :silly:
Ace
Roar Rookie
still not over not winning?
Ace
Roar Rookie
check your facts or get memory pills
Rowdy
Roar Rookie
Rocky Raccoon ????
Rowdy
Roar Rookie
The Great Moral Grief of England
Panthers
Roar Rookie
They also always persecuted those closest to them & around them. As in the Welsh ,Scottish & Irish.
Ivor Biggin
Roar Rookie
Adam Gilchrist in a WC match. Now tell me, No.9, when was the last time a Pom walked in a significant match??