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Ashes 2025-26: Australia vs England | 2nd Test | Gabba | December 04-08 | Match Discussion

Which side will win the pink ball Test?


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The Bald Eagle

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Australia takes a 1-0 lead into the Second Ashes Test against England following a crushing eight-wicket victory inside two days at Perth.
The series now moves to The Gabba in Brisbane for a crucial Day-Night (Pink Ball) Test starting on December 4th.

So can England bounce back after an utter embarrassment or will Aussies put another nail in the coffin in the Pink ball Test?

Australia Squad : Pat Cummins (Captain), Steve Smith, Scott Boland, Alex Carey (Wicketkeeper), Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster.

England Squad: Ben Stokes (Captain), Jofra Archer, Gus Atkinson, Shoaib Bashir, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Jamie Smith (Wicketkeeper), Mark Wood.

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'Might as well go home now': Ian Botham rips 'horrendous' England

England great Ian Botham says the tourists "might as well go home now" if they don't change their approach for the rest of the series.

England have not won the Ashes in Australia after losing the first Test since the 1950s but Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes have shown they can turn a series around in recent years.

Against South Africa in 2022, they won the series 2-1 after losing the opener at Lord's.

They were 2-0 down to Australia on home soil in the 2023 Ashes after losing the first two Tests but dominated the rest of the drawn series, even if the urn eluded them again.

However, Botham is unconvinced about England's chances unless the team's mindset changes.

"It was horrendous, there's no other word for it," Botham told PA News Agency.

"England need to fire up and fire up quickly. I'm fed up of hearing, 'This is the way we play'. If I hear it once more, I think I'll throw something at the television.

"If that's the way you play, you might as well go home now because it's going to be 5-0.

"They probably won't like me saying that but they need to get their heads around it. I want more pride when I see people pulling that sweater on."

While England have ample time to sift through the rubble of defeat in Perth, the tourists are unlikely to come up with a new game plan to replace 'Bazball' for the Brisbane Test.

For all the criticism raining down on England after the two-day mayhem in Perth, they had the game in the palm of their hand.

It took five English wickets falling in 40 minutes of madness for England to turn Bazball from a weapon into a stick to be beaten with.

Still, the question hangs over this series: will Bazball even work in Australia?

Many pundits are unconvinced and argue that the extra pace and bounce of the wickets, as well as the hosts' discipline, will expose England's high-wire act over five Tests.

"(Perth) may yet come to be regarded as the moment Test cricket either redefined itself for the entertainment age or the precise point at which Bazball finally crashed into the unforgiving wall of Australian reality," former Australian Test captain Greg Chappell wrote in The Sydney Morning Herald.

Others argue Travis Head's match-winning hundred in 69 balls was Bazball personified, just not under an English flag.

Brisbane's day-night Test may make a return to English pragmatism even more unlikely — all 13 pink-ball Tests in Australia have produced results and none of the last four have made it to a fifth day.

Another rapid result at the Gabba would surprise no one as both teams look to land an early knockout blow rather than stay the distance.

England's task is unlikely to get any easier.

Australia's regular captain, Pat Cummins, practised with the pink ball in a nets session during New South Wales training in Sydney on Tuesday and is eyeing a return from a back injury at the Gabba.

But even if England drop the Test to fall 2-0 behind, McCullum and Stokes may still back their players to get back in the saddle and charge to a comeback series win for the ages.

If it all goes awry, though, the three-year Bazball era could face an uncomfortable reckoning after less than two weeks of cricket in Australia.

 
It's about to get a whole lot worse for England. Australia have a near perfect record in pink-ball tests and their fast-bowlers are a nightmare to face in the evening sessions.

But then again for England, even losing the match in three days would be an improvement.
 
Aussies make Cummins call as second Test squad revealed

Australian selectors have named an unchanged squad for the day-night Ashes Test at the Gabba

Pat Cummins' return has been put on ice for the second Test with the Australian captain left out of the hosts' squad for the day-night Ashes Test in Brisbane.

Australia today named an unchanged 14-man group for Thursday's second Test at the Gabba with veteran opener Usman Khawaja included after back spasms prevented him from batting in the second innings of Perth's series opener.

Australia second Test squad: Steve Smith (c), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster

But Cummins has been given an extra two weeks to return to full fitness having missed Australia's eight-wicket first Test win over England in Perth due to a back injury.

The 32-year-old is in the final stages of his recovery from lumbar back stress and will again travel with the squad to Brisbane.

Cummins trained strongly at the SCG on Friday, bowling at what appeared to be full speed to Steve Smith for more than an hour with a pink ball after getting through a similar session at NSW's Cricket Central headquarters on Tuesday.

The right-armer also trained alongside the Test squad in the lead up to the Ashes opener, but ultimately Australia have decided not to risk their star paceman.

It means native Queenslander Brendan Doggett looks set to retain his place in the XI for Brisbane after collecting five wickets in the first Test in a fine debut outing.

Cummins will then be a strong chance to return to the side for the third match in Adelaide beginning December 17.

Cummins was joined by Josh Hazlewood during his net sessions this week, who noticeably bowled with red ball after Australian coach Andrew McDonald stated on Monday he was confident the right-armer would be available towards the back-end of the Ashes series.

Hazlewood also missed the Ashes opener after suffering a hamstring strain playing for NSW in the Sheffield Shield a week before the first Test.

Khawaja has been named in the second Test squad but will need to prove his fitness when the squad assembles in Brisbane on Sunday after back spasms prevented him from batting in the second innings in Perth.

Travis Head took the 38-year-old left-hander's place at the top of the order and blazed the second fastest century in Ashes history as Australia cantered to their 205-run target in 28.2 overs to take a 1-0 lead in the series.

05:08Play video

McDonald said Australia had "a lot to consider" regarding their batting order for the second Test and Head said he was "comfortable" in any position.

Should Khawaja not be passed fit, or Australia opt to rejig their top order pairing following Head's 69-ball assault, it could open the door for reserve batter Josh Inglis or auxiliary allrounder Beau Webster to return to the side in Brisbane.

"I feel like over the last few years I've got a blueprint and a tempo (for how) I want to go about things," Head said on Triple M radio this week.

"It certainly wasn't as hard as I went the other day, but I thought my first 35 balls were really good.

"Then obviously their plans changed. They went to the short-pitched bowling, and I felt like there were opportunities to score in certain parts of the ground. I had to be a bit proactive, and I had to try a few things and move around on the crease … but I just wanted to get the ball to certain parts of the ground to score, and all my mind was on was scoring runs."

Meanwhile, England arrived in Brisbane on Thursday, with their entire first Test XI opting against pink-ball match practice with only unused squad members Jacob Bethell, Matthew Potts and Josh Tongue to feature against the Prime Minister's XI this weekend.

Ben Stokes' side will hold their first training session at the Gabba on Sunday afternoon followed by a session under lights on Monday.

 
Aussies may end up winning 5-0.

England simply do not have the team to win a Test in Australia. Bazball doesn't work in Australia because Aussie grounds tend to be huge. Also, Aussie pitches do not suit England.

Their bowling is pretty average too.
 
Am sure India loosing the next match's toss is an event much more likely to happen than a Wicket in Mitchell Starc's first over :) :faf :ua
 
As others have said, the gap seems too long, especially when the England team is not playing any tour matches.

I wonder what is better for the visiting teams perspective, will a long break help heal the trauma of the humiliating defeat, or will it allow the wound to get worse.

Certainly, from a fan's perspective, a quick round 2 would have been preferable.
 
It's again Australia who'll win.

England’s recent Test record looks impressive on paper, but a deeper look shows their wins have mostly come against lower-ranked or rebuilding sides like Ireland, Zimbabwe, and West Indies, while genuine elite contests continue to expose the limits of Bazball. Yes, they swept New Zealand 3-0 in 2022, beat South Africa 2-1, stunned Pakistan 3-0 away, and dominated at home against West Indies (3-0) and Sri Lanka (2-1), but the pattern shifts sharply against stronger opposition: a 2-2 home draw in the Pataudi Trophy, another 2-2 split in the 2023 Ashes, a 1-1 draw in New Zealand, a heavy 4-1 demolition in India, a 2-1 defeat in Pakistan in 2024/25, and most recently another 2-2 stalemate at home against India. The 4-1 hammering in India remains the defining reality check, proving that aggression without adaptability collapses under real pressure. With the 2025/26 Ashes looming, all signs point toward another Bazball failure the moment England run into an Australian attack that refuses to be bullied.
 
As others have said, the gap seems too long, especially when the England team is not playing any tour matches.

I wonder what is better for the visiting teams perspective, will a long break help heal the trauma of the humiliating defeat, or will it allow the wound to get worse.

Certainly, from a fan's perspective, a quick round 2 would have been preferable.
Who needs practice when you can hit the greens and play some golf? :stokes
 
Small reprieve for England that Cummins is still not fit. But I think Starc and Boland will be more than enough for them. Just like they were in the first test.

Only choice for Australia is Webster or Inglis in place of Khawaja. Think they should go with Webster.
 
As others have said, the gap seems too long, especially when the England team is not playing any tour matches.

I wonder what is better for the visiting teams perspective, will a long break help heal the trauma of the humiliating defeat, or will it allow the wound to get worse.

Certainly, from a fan's perspective, a quick round 2 would have been preferable.

England is going to play a pink ball practice game vs Prime Minister's XI starting tomorrow.

However, they decided not to risk any of the XI from the Perth test so they won't get any pink ball practice before the second test.
 
England is going to play a pink ball practice game vs Prime Minister's XI starting tomorrow.

However, they decided not to risk any of the XI from the Perth test so they won't get any pink ball practice before the second test.
Thats not really England, its England Lions no matter how they frame it.

Zak Crawley could be facing up to Mitchell Starc under lights with the pink ball having had no batting time since his pair, which frightens me and I'm not even an England fan!
 
Thats not really England, its England Lions no matter how they frame it.

Zak Crawley could be facing up to Mitchell Starc under lights with the pink ball having had no batting time since his pair, which frightens me and I'm not even an England fan!

Oh I see. I had read something about Michael Vaughan and Cook crashing out over that decision so wasn't sure what is going on. Thanks for the clarification, bruh 👍
 
Do Australia really even need Lyon in Brisbane? He bowled two overs in the last match and likely won't have a major role to play in the pink-ball test. Why not drop him and get the extra batsman/all-rounder in?
 
Do Australia really even need Lyon in Brisbane? He bowled two overs in the last match and likely won't have a major role to play in the pink-ball test. Why not drop him and get the extra batsman/all-rounder in?
Very likely. Head to open, Inglis to bat at 5, Green 6, Carey 7, Webster 8.

There may be no need for specialist spin.
 
Cummo is fit, not so sure about Hoff, and Starc's best is pink ball which is already to come but he already has a 10-fer.
 
Aus going with unchanged xi. Would be interesting what order they play. If Travis wants to open then that should be it.
 
Call us rubbish, arrogant is too far - Stokes

Captain Ben Stokes said he can accept criticism of his England team but believes allegations of arrogance are "too far".

England have come under heavy scrutiny for the manner and response to their crushing defeat by Australia in the first Ashes Test.

The tourists threw away a dominant position to lose inside two days in Perth, then opted not to send any of the XI from the first Test to play in an England Lions match against the Prime Minister's XI in Canberra.

Former Australia pace bowler Mitchell Johnson called England "arrogant" and "cocky Poms" who are at risk of "serious embarrassment".

Stokes told BBC Sport: "You can call us rubbish, call us whatever you want. We didn't have the Test match that we wanted to.

"Arrogant might be a little bit too far, but that's OK. We'll take the rough with the smooth. I'd rather words like 'rubbish', but 'arrogant', I'm not so sure about that."

Stokes was speaking as England began five days of training in Brisbane in the run-up to the second Test - a day-nighter at the Gabba which begins on Thursday, 4 December.

England's session at Allan Border Field on Saturday morning was curtailed by rain.

Three players from the Ashes squad who did not play in Perth – Jacob Bethell, Josh Tongue and Matthew Potts – have joined the Lions for their two-day pink-ball match in the capital.

Of the remaining 13 in Brisbane, only Mark Wood was not present for the optional session on Saturday as the fast bowler rested the left knee upon which he had surgery earlier this year.

Stokes was talking in public for the first time since the aftermath of the defeat at Perth Stadium.

The all-rounder admitted he accepts the debate around England's stance on the Canberra fixture, said his team need to "learn" from the first Test, and he understands the disappointment of supporters following the performance in Perth.

England were not scheduled to play in Canberra, but the swift conclusion to the first Test raised the prospect of more time in the middle and experience with the pink ball.

The tourists opted against sending the first-Test XI to the capital in the desire to keep the team together for reasons of morale. There was also a feeling a slow, low pitch in mild Canberra would not provide useful conditions in which to prepare for the heat of Brisbane and pace of the Gabba.

Former captain Michael Vaughan and BBC chief cricket commentator Jonathan Agnew were among those to question England's decision, while Stokes' team received support from two other ex-England skippers, Michael Atherton and Alec Stewart.

"I do understand it," said Stokes. "We have a pink-ball match coming up in Brisbane, and we have an opportunity to play some pink-ball cricket.

"But there's obviously a lot more to it than just that. You take all the factors into consideration, the pros and cons, whatever it may be. We then discuss that and decide what we think is the best preparation.

"We have a few more days off than we planned after that Test. We had to go away and ask how we use these next few days wisely in order to be prepared for what it will be like in Brisbane."

England had given themselves an outstanding opportunity after four sessions of the first Test. At 65-1 in their second innings, the visitors had a lead of 105 runs.

But England lost their last nine wickets for 99 runs, including a calamitous spell of 3-0 when all of Ollie Pope, Harry Brook and Joe Root were dismissed driving at the ball.

The collapse has led to more questions of England's attacking style. Though Stokes pointed to the aggression of Australia's Travis Head, who made the second-fastest century in Ashes history to lead the home side to victory, the England skipper accepted his team could have been "a lot better".

"The important thing we need to do as a team and individuals is learn from it," said Stokes. "We have identified those moments and spoken about them as a group.

"In terms of execution, could we have been better at executing what we want to do? Definitely.

"Sometimes when you go out there and make a decision, it doesn't always pay off, or work the way you want it to. That's the key for the rest of this tour, staying true to the beliefs of how we play our cricket, but also we do know we could have been a lot better in certain ways."

England had won only one of their 17 previous Tests when Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum took over the in 2022.

The upturn in results and breathtaking style of cricket rebuilt a connection with supporters, a connection that has been tested in the past week. Many of those travelling to Perth spent vast sums of money, only to see England beaten in the first two-day Ashes Test for 104 years.

"We know that there'll be a lot of disappointed fans after that first defeat," said Stokes. But it's a five-game series, we've got four games to go.

"We've lost the first one - we're absolutely desperate to come home with that goal from before we started the series, which is to win the Ashes, and doing absolutely everything within our powers and using our time best to allow us to go out there and try and achieve that goal."

BBC
 
England's Wood set to miss second Ashes Test

England fast bowler Mark Wood is set to miss the crucial second Ashes Test in Brisbane because of concerns over his left knee.

Wood only returned from a nine-month absence following surgery on the same left knee in England's first-Test defeat in Perth last week.

The 35-year-old bowled 11 overs in the match as England were beaten by Australia inside two days - the first two-day Ashes Test in 104 years.

Wood missed England's first training session in Brisbane on Saturday morning, the only one of the 13 players in Queensland not to be present at Allan Border Field.

Josh Tongue would be the most likely candidate to take Wood's place in the England XI for the second Test, a day-night match at the Gabba on Thursday.

Tongue is one of three England players - alongside fellow seamer Matthew Potts and batter Jacob Bethell - who have been sent to play for England Lions against the Prime Minister's XI in Canberra this weekend.

A further injury setback for Wood is a huge blow to the Durham man and England. It could even raise questions about his international future.

One of the fastest bowlers to ever play for England, Wood has a chequered injury history. Before Perth he had not played a Test for 15 months, firstly because of an elbow problem, then the surgery on his left knee.

When he made his on-field comeback prior to the first Test, against England Lions in an Ashes warm-up match, Wood managed eight overs before suffering tightness in his left hamstring.

Scans cleared him of any concern in the hamstring and he was passed fit to play in Perth, where he had match figures of 0-44.

Wood's availability helped England execute a long-standing plan to unleash high pace on Australia in this Ashes.

By fielding a five-man pace attack at Perth Stadium, England recorded their fastest collective day of bowling in Test cricket on the opening day of the series.

But England's speeds dropped on day two, as Australia raced to an eight-wicket victory in their second innings.

Speaking prior to the news of Wood's injury, former Australia fast bowler Jason Gillespie said he was "concerned about the robustness" of England's attack.

"Do they have enough work in the bank to be fit and strong enough to bowl consistently high pace across the course of a whole match and then back it up in subsequent matches?" Gillespie told Stumped on BBC World Service.

"That is the big question mark for me."

Wood's absence would be keenly felt by England in the day-night conditions at the Gabba - a ground where they have not won since 1986.

England have a poor record in floodlit Tests, having won only two of their previous seven, including three defeats in Australia.

Australia have won 13 of their 14 day-night matches and, in Mitchell Starc, have the best pink-ball bowler in the world.

The pink ball does not behave differently to its red counterpart, but can be harder to see under lights.

Part of Starc's success in pink-ball matches is the number of deliveries he bowls over 87mph and Wood, England's fastest option, took nine wickets when he last played a day-night Test against Australia in Hobart in 2022.

Speaking on the For The Love of Cricket podcast, former England seamer Stuart Broad said: "There's something about the pink ball, you just can't pick it up quite as well. You get no clues as well, so the seam is black against the pink background, whereas with a red ball and white seam you might see Mitchell Starc's in-swinger coming back into the stumps or scrambling around.

"It's just the lights are reflecting off the pink ball so it's almost like a big planet coming flying towards you.

"It means you're just judging it from the movement off the surface or reading off the movement of the ball, but at such pace it's quite difficult to do."

BBC
 
Only a miracle would save England. Australia will again handover a flop to bazball
 
Josh Tongue is okay. Not that impressive tbh. Wood provided an x-factor with his pace
 
England's Wood set to miss second Ashes Test

England fast bowler Mark Wood is set to miss the crucial second Ashes Test in Brisbane because of concerns over his left knee.

Wood only returned from a nine-month absence following surgery on the same left knee in England's first-Test defeat in Perth last week.

The 35-year-old bowled 11 overs in the match as England were beaten by Australia inside two days - the first two-day Ashes Test in 104 years.

Wood missed England's first training session in Brisbane on Saturday morning, the only one of the 13 players in Queensland not to be present at Allan Border Field.

Josh Tongue would be the most likely candidate to take Wood's place in the England XI for the second Test, a day-night match at the Gabba on Thursday.

Tongue is one of three England players - alongside fellow seamer Matthew Potts and batter Jacob Bethell - who have been sent to play for England Lions against the Prime Minister's XI in Canberra this weekend.

A further injury setback for Wood is a huge blow to the Durham man and England. It could even raise questions about his international future.

One of the fastest bowlers to ever play for England, Wood has a chequered injury history. Before Perth he had not played a Test for 15 months, firstly because of an elbow problem, then the surgery on his left knee.

When he made his on-field comeback prior to the first Test, against England Lions in an Ashes warm-up match, Wood managed eight overs before suffering tightness in his left hamstring.

Scans cleared him of any concern in the hamstring and he was passed fit to play in Perth, where he had match figures of 0-44.

Wood's availability helped England execute a long-standing plan to unleash high pace on Australia in this Ashes.

By fielding a five-man pace attack at Perth Stadium, England recorded their fastest collective day of bowling in Test cricket on the opening day of the series.

But England's speeds dropped on day two, as Australia raced to an eight-wicket victory in their second innings.

Speaking prior to the news of Wood's injury, former Australia fast bowler Jason Gillespie said he was "concerned about the robustness" of England's attack.

"Do they have enough work in the bank to be fit and strong enough to bowl consistently high pace across the course of a whole match and then back it up in subsequent matches?" Gillespie told Stumped on BBC World Service.

"That is the big question mark for me."

Wood's absence would be keenly felt by England in the day-night conditions at the Gabba - a ground where they have not won since 1986.

England have a poor record in floodlit Tests, having won only two of their previous seven, including three defeats in Australia.

Australia have won 13 of their 14 day-night matches and, in Mitchell Starc, have the best pink-ball bowler in the world.

The pink ball does not behave differently to its red counterpart, but can be harder to see under lights.

Part of Starc's success in pink-ball matches is the number of deliveries he bowls over 87mph and Wood, England's fastest option, took nine wickets when he last played a day-night Test against Australia in Hobart in 2022.

Speaking on the For The Love of Cricket podcast, former England seamer Stuart Broad said: "There's something about the pink ball, you just can't pick it up quite as well. You get no clues as well, so the seam is black against the pink background, whereas with a red ball and white seam you might see Mitchell Starc's in-swinger coming back into the stumps or scrambling around.

"It's just the lights are reflecting off the pink ball so it's almost like a big planet coming flying towards you.

"It means you're just judging it from the movement off the surface or reading off the movement of the ball, but at such pace it's quite difficult to do."

BBC
This guy couldn't have an impact on that Perth pitch and now he will be out because of glass made concerns.
 
English press, ex-players and fans have been rightly seething this week. Not many touring teams even get a 1st innings lead, or face an Australian attack minus Cummins and Hazlewood. The deck couldn't have been more loaded in their favour !

We know from our own painful experiences of touring Australia - the moment things go wrong, the wheels fall off very quickly. England have never recovered from 1-0 down to win an away Ashes since 1954/55. They recovered from 2-0 down in the last Ashes but that was at home.

For once England have a pace battery suited to Australian conditions, but their batters must humble themselves and respect the conditions. You can't drive on the up like you can on lower bounce pitches unless the ball is very full.

Looks like they've arranged extra practice sessions in Brisbane instead of using the Lions game in Canberra as prep. In fairness that may not be the worst thing as Canberra is a slow and low pitch.

They better practice hard as England barely play pink ball cricket unlike Australia who have won 12 out of their 13 home D/N Tests, and Starc is a master of the pink ball.
 
English press, ex-players and fans have been rightly seething this week. Not many touring teams even get a 1st innings lead, or face an Australian attack minus Cummins and Hazlewood. The deck couldn't have been more loaded in their favour !

We know from our own painful experiences of touring Australia - the moment things go wrong, the wheels fall off very quickly. England have never recovered from 1-0 down to win an away Ashes since 1954/55. They recovered from 2-0 down in the last Ashes but that was at home.

For once England have a pace battery suited to Australian conditions, but their batters must humble themselves and respect the conditions. You can't drive on the up like you can on lower bounce pitches unless the ball is very full.

Looks like they've arranged extra practice sessions in Brisbane instead of using the Lions game in Canberra as prep. In fairness that may not be the worst thing as Canberra is a slow and low pitch.

They better practice hard as England barely play pink ball cricket unlike Australia who have won 12 out of their 13 home D/N Tests, and Starc is a master of the pink ball.
It is possible to recover. India recovered after 36 AO.

Having said that, I'm not sure this English attack is relentless enough to cause problems for Australia, even if they can manage to stay fit and that's already a big if.
 
It is possible to recover. India recovered after 36 AO.

Having said that, I'm not sure this English attack is relentless enough to cause problems for Australia, even if they can manage to stay fit and that's already a big if.
We're gonna learn a lot about the character and resolve of this England team over the coming weeks.

Is someone willing, or even able, to play the Pujara role in 20/21 and occupy the crease while wearing a few ?
 
Am putting my head out there and predicting an eng win....feel Aus is getting too carried away and over confident....Eng have the bowling attack to take 20, if their batting performs, they will be a serious threat...
 
Root and Head differ over need for Ashes pink-ball Test

Joe Root has questioned whether the Ashes needs to include a pink-ball Test as England prepare to meet Australia in a day-nighter in Brisbane.

England are 1-0 behind in the five-match series after defeat in Perth and will attempt to level the series from Thursday at the Gabba - a ground where they have not won since 1986.

Day-night Tests were sanctioned by the International Cricket Council in 2015 in the hope audiences would be "encouraged and improved".

The concept has been embraced in Australia. Thirteen of the 24 day-night Tests to have been played have been in this country.

Australia also have an outstanding record in day-night Tests, winning 13 of their 14 worldwide. England have won two of their seven, including three defeats in Australia.

Asked whether he believed the Ashes, cricket's oldest rivalry, needs a day-night Test, former England captain Root told BBC Sport: "I personally don't think so.

"It does add to things. It's successful and popular here, and Australia have got a good record here as well. You can see why we're playing one of those games.

"Ultimately, you know from two years out it is going to be there. It's part and parcel of making sure you're ready for it.

"A series like this, does it need it? I don't think so, but it doesn't mean it shouldn't be here either."

Australia batter Travis Head offered an opposing view when he said: "We've embraced it. We've been able to put out a good product and play really well with it.

"Pink ball, white ball, red ball - who really cares? Does it need it, does it not? It's a great spectacle and we're going to have huge crowds again.

"If you win, you think it's great. If you lose, maybe not. Both teams may have differing opinions by the end of it. I think it's great for the game.

"We talk about T20, T10 and you see all these different formats. It still works the same way. It's still five days, it's just with a slightly different coloured ball and it brings a different atmosphere."

Australia's solitary defeat in a pink-ball Test came in their previous day-nighter at the Gabba, a shock loss to West Indies last year.

There has been one day-night Test played in England – against West Indies in 2017.

Australia have traditionally held their floodlit Tests in Adelaide, events that have proved popular with fans.

Though the Ashes schedule has changed for this tour – Adelaide is the third Test in the series and played in the day time - the pink-ball Test has remained on the calendar.

By beginning the series in Perth, in the west-coast time zone, and following with a day-nighter in Brisbane, the series opens with two matches suitable for prime-time TV viewing on the east coast of Australia.

Root has played in all seven of England's pink-ball Tests and identified the change of conditions when the floodlights take hold.

"At different phases of the day it can feel quite placid, you can feel out of the game with the ball and things can turn around," said Root.

"Similarly with the bat, recognising those moments and utilising them as best you can."

Despite the different colours, the pink and red balls used in Australia do not offer different amounts of swing and seam movement to pace bowlers.

The challenge for batters is seeing the pink ball under floodlights. Australia's Mitchell Starc has taken more wickets than any other bowler in day-night Tests, partly because of the number of deliveries he bowls above 87mph.

"There will be different elements to contend with, but that is all part of the fun, right?" said Root.

"Can we be skilful enough and brave enough to be better than Australia in those big moments."

Given pace is a route to success in day-night Tests, the fact England are set to lose Mark Wood is a blow.

The tourists' fastest bowler looks likely to sit out at the Gabba because of soreness in his left knee.

England could opt to bring in a like-for-like replacement in Josh Tongue, or use the spin of Shoaib Bashir or Will Jacks.

The visitors chose not to send any of their XI from the first Test to play in an England Lions fixture against the Prime Minister's XI, a two-day pink-ball fixture in Canberra.

Root said he did not feel like he needed to bat in Canberra, despite falling to Mitchell Starc for scores of nought and eight in Perth.

"It's having a bit of realism, understanding there are things I might have done differently, but also it's not the end of the world," said Root who holds the record for most Test runs scored by an Englishman.

"I know I'm a good player, I know I'm going to be able to score runs again. It's just making sure I'm really clear about how I'm going to construct an innings against the pink ball in these conditions against this attack."

BBC
 
Initially I thought he was taking dig at Shubman, for losing at Lord after sledging controversy....but hahah, he is hinting at Bazball
1764589065678.jpg
 
This will be very tough for England. Facing Starc in a pink ball wont be easy for their batting.

England currently do not have the team to consistently do well in Test.

Bazball is a band-aid. It is not a long term solution.

Bazball is unlikely to work in most places.
 
Khawaja backed as mystery surrounds Australia XI for Gabba

Usman Khawaja no certainty play home Ashes Test in Brisbane despite backing from teammate Marnus Labuschagne.

Australia batter Marnus Labuschagne has thrown his support behind teammate Usman Khawaja as the veteran opener battles fitness concerns ahead of the second Ashes Test against England in Brisbane.

Khawaja suffered back spasms for much of the opening Test of the series in Perth and managed a brief session in the nets at training on Monday as he pushes to regain his place in the Aussie XI for the day-night contest at the Gabba that commences on Thursday.

A recent dip in form has added further speculation on Khawaja's spot in the side - the left-hander has managed just one Test century since the Ashes series in England in 2023 - but Labuschagne knows how important his fellow top-order player is when at the peak of his powers.

"Usman's a high-quality player. You look at his record … what he's done for Australian cricket, especially since he's come back, he's been super consistent, he's been really the rock of at the top there," Labuschagne said.

"There's been a lot of talk about how many opening partners he's had over his time.

"But I'm not a selector and whatever happens is all up to people above my pay grade and what they think is the best way for us to win the game and win this series.

"It's just game by game, and you work out what's your best team and how does it best work for the game."

If Khawaja can't prove his fitness for his home Test in Brisbane then the Aussies may opt to use hard-hitting lefty Travis Head at the top of their order after he scored a match-winning century in the role of opener in the second innings against England in Perth.

Head fuelled the fire even further earlier this week when he indicted that he would be happy to remain at the top of the batting order should selectors decide this was the best option for the team.

“They've (Austrlia selectors understood where I’ve sat with it for a period of time now,” Head told Australian radio station SEN.

“We've obviously talked about the replacement for David Warner, and I always threw my name up and always threw the option there. Obviously I do it in international white-ball cricket.

“So, I threw myself as an option if that's what was necessary for the team and best suited for the team. We've been in and out of that conversation a fair bit over the last two years. We're back at it again.

“So, for me, it's just about working out where Pat (Cummins), Steve (Smith), Ron (Andrew McDonald), Bails (George Bailey) and those guys see me best in the team and where I can best contribute and how we win games of cricket.

“There's no doubt we're having those conversations… but I’m just happy to do what the team requires.”

If Khawaja is unable to play in Brisbane then the Aussies have three options to replace him in their squad, with all-rounder Beau Webster, keeper-batter Josh Inglis and back-up pacer Michael Neser the remaining players in the 14-member group.

Skipper Pat Cummins is not in Australia's squad for Brisbane and is likely to return for the third Test in Adelaide from December 17.

Australia squad for second Test: Steve Smith (c), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster

ICC
 
England name XI for second Ashes Test

England have made one change to their XI from the first Ashes Test in Perth, with spinning all-rounder Will Jacks replacing the injured Mark Wood.

Jacks has played in two previous Test matches for England and claimed a maiden five-wicket haul on debut against Pakistan in 2022.

The second Test starts at The Gabba on Thursday, December 4.

England XI:

Zak Crawley
Ben Duckett
Ollie Pope
Joe Root
Harry Brook
Ben Stokes (c)
Jamie Smith (wk)
Will Jacks
Gus Atkinson
Brydon Carse
Jofra Archer
 
Australia forced into call on Khawaja for Gabba Test

Veteran opener ruled out of day-night Ashes Test in Brisbane with back injury with Aussies again pondering opening combination options

Usman Khawaja's international future is up in the air after the opener was ruled out of the second NRMA Insurance Test against England due to the back injury he suffered in Perth almost two weeks ago.

Josh Inglis and Beau Webster are both in the mix to return to Australia's XI after the Aussies ruled out Khawaja but did not replace him in the squad.

Khawaja, who turns 39 later this month, had a 30-minute hit in the Gabba practice nets on Tuesday. The left-hander appeared in discomfort at times and has not recovered well enough to be available for selection for the match beginning Thursday.

Australia squad: Steve Smith (c), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster

It means Australia could field yet another new opener in this Ashes series after Khawaja's back spasms in the first Test forced Marnus Labuschagne and then Travis Head to be deployed as makeshift options.

Head indicated this week he would be happy to take on the new ball again after his match-winning fourth-innings century flummoxed England, though that could expose Australia's most impactful middle-order batter to more difficult batting situations in this upcoming pink-ball encounter.

Coach Andrew McDonald has suggested his side could take a hybrid approach to their batting order with positions changing depending on the prevailing conditions.

It means the hosts could get creative with Khawaja's replacement.

Inglis hit a rapid ton against the England Lions in a tour match opening for the Cricket Australia XI last week. If included in Brisbane, he could potentially take on the new ball when the Aussies want to protect Head.

Webster has also batted in the top order for Tasmania but won his Test spot off his middle-order batting and handy seam bowling, which translated well to international level before being an unlucky omission in Perth.

Australia instead recalled Marnus Labuschagne at three, with Cameron Green reverting to number six.

Webster debuted in the Test team last summer against India after consistently strong form in the Sheffield Shield, and has barely put a foot wrong in the Baggy Green, averaging 34.63 with the bat and 23.25 with the ball after seven matches.

Inglis made a century on Test debut earlier this year. The right-hander is Australia's limited-overs keeper but has played in the Test side in Sri Lanka and the Caribbean alongside Alex Carey as a specialist batter having made his name as an attacking middle-order man in the mould of Head.

 
Renshaw just hit a hundred in his last outing. He should have been given a go if Khawaja wasn't playing.
 
England needs to bring in their best game to win . It's not going to be easy but you have to fight hard to make a comeback in the series.
 
England needs to bring in their best game to win . It's not going to be easy but you have to fight hard to make a comeback in the series.
England won't get any better apportunity to win a test in Australia since 2011 . Australia is missing Cummins and Hazelwood.

They bottled the 1st test , let's see how they will Play in 2nd test.

Once Cummins and Hazelwood come back Then game over for England.

:kp
 
Will Jacks is an underrated spin option so not a bad selection picking him for the Pink Ball Test. Not sure if it will make much of a difference on the result though
 
Australia forced into call on Khawaja for Gabba Test

Veteran opener ruled out of day-night Ashes Test in Brisbane with back injury with Aussies again pondering opening combination options

Usman Khawaja's international future is up in the air after the opener was ruled out of the second NRMA Insurance Test against England due to the back injury he suffered in Perth almost two weeks ago.

Josh Inglis and Beau Webster are both in the mix to return to Australia's XI after the Aussies ruled out Khawaja but did not replace him in the squad.

Khawaja, who turns 39 later this month, had a 30-minute hit in the Gabba practice nets on Tuesday. The left-hander appeared in discomfort at times and has not recovered well enough to be available for selection for the match beginning Thursday.

Australia squad: Steve Smith (c), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster

It means Australia could field yet another new opener in this Ashes series after Khawaja's back spasms in the first Test forced Marnus Labuschagne and then Travis Head to be deployed as makeshift options.

Head indicated this week he would be happy to take on the new ball again after his match-winning fourth-innings century flummoxed England, though that could expose Australia's most impactful middle-order batter to more difficult batting situations in this upcoming pink-ball encounter.

Coach Andrew McDonald has suggested his side could take a hybrid approach to their batting order with positions changing depending on the prevailing conditions.

It means the hosts could get creative with Khawaja's replacement.

Inglis hit a rapid ton against the England Lions in a tour match opening for the Cricket Australia XI last week. If included in Brisbane, he could potentially take on the new ball when the Aussies want to protect Head.

Webster has also batted in the top order for Tasmania but won his Test spot off his middle-order batting and handy seam bowling, which translated well to international level before being an unlucky omission in Perth.

Australia instead recalled Marnus Labuschagne at three, with Cameron Green reverting to number six.

Webster debuted in the Test team last summer against India after consistently strong form in the Sheffield Shield, and has barely put a foot wrong in the Baggy Green, averaging 34.63 with the bat and 23.25 with the ball after seven matches.

Inglis made a century on Test debut earlier this year. The right-hander is Australia's limited-overs keeper but has played in the Test side in Sri Lanka and the Caribbean alongside Alex Carey as a specialist batter having made his name as an attacking middle-order man in the mould of Head.

Lol its for the best, Khawaja is useless.
 
Pink-ball, pitch mysteries leave Aussies unsure on XI

Door left ajar for unlikely Pat Cummins return, but hosts will wait until toss to finalise their team

The absence of Australia's run-making rock coupled with the pink ball's enduring mysteries has left the Ashes leaders still ruminating on their best combination for the Gabba's day-night Test less than 24 hours before it is due to begin.

The home side, up 1-0 in the NRMA Insurance series, have not shut down the prospect of Pat Cummins making a shock return in Brisbane even as his captaincy fill-in Steve Smith initially let out a short giggle when asked about it on match eve.

Cummins was not named in Australia's squad for this Test nor did his team take the opportunity to add him to it when the injured Usman Khawaja was excused from duties this week. But the possibility of his earlier-then-anticipated return from a back injury was one of several selection questions left unanswered on match eve.

Australia squad: Steve Smith (c), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster

Australia's brains trust – coach Andrew McDonald, selector George Bailey along with Cummins and Smith – held an extensive pitch-side meeting on Wednesday afternoon not long after it had been given its final mow.

But finding a replacement for Khawaja, who has not missed a Test since his recall during the 2021-22 Ashes and has been Australia's leading run scorer in the four years since, as well as finalising a bowling attack have not proved straightforward.

McDonald and co's repeated poking of the second-Test surface, as if a mythical beast might leap out from under it if the right spot was prodded, suggested they still did not have a good feel for the 22 yards of turf.

Australia's team will not be announced until the toss on Thursday afternoon. Josh Inglis shapes as Khawaja's likely replacement, with Travis Head to either share the opening role with him, or take it outright after his match-winning ton in Perth.

Inglis is not a regular opener but hit a ton after being shoehorned in to bat there in a tour game against England Lions last month.

Smith also did not rule out the possibility of Australia leaving out spinner Nathan Lyon, as they did in their most recent floodlit Test in Jamaica earlier this year. That could allow them to either deepen their batting with allrounder Beau Webster or pull a shock move by bringing Cummins back in.

The fact it was Smith, and not Cummins, leading repeated inspections of the Gabba pitch before the leaders' main tête-à-tête suggested the former was preparing to be the man in charge this week.

"A whole heap of things are on the table … I can't give you a great deal right now, I apologise," Smith told reporters before his team held an optional training session. He confirmed Cummins would be in charge if he played.

After laughing at the first mention of a potential Cummins return during his pre-match press conference, Smith then pointed out the difference between the intensity required in the practice nets versus the intensity of an Ashes contest.

Cummins, who has been managing a lumbar bone injury that was discovered before it had developed into a full-blown stress fracture, has now been back bowling for five weeks.

The 32-year-old looks to be closing in on full fitness during training, sending down multiple high-pace spells as well as batting extensively against the rose-tinged Kookaburra this week.

"He looks pretty good to me, the way he's bowled in the nets. Obviously, games are a different intensity for sure, but he's tracking really nicely. He knows his body well and we'll wait and see," Smith said of Cummins.

Bringing in Cummins for Lyon, instead of a seamer, would potentially negate the need for him to bowl a high volume of overs given it leaves his side with five pace options.

While Smith was non-committal on all things selection, he has outlined that he will don 'eye black' tape under his eyes after consulting Shivnarine Chanderpaul, the former West Indies batter who was renowned for wearing them.

The Guyanese left-hander pointed out Smith had not applied them correctly at training this week.

"I actually messaged Shivnarine Chanderpaul and asked him what his thoughts were, whether he wore the chalk or the strips," said Smith.

"He said the strips, and he thinks it blocks out 65 per cent of the glare. He also said, 'I've seen photos – and you're wearing them the wrong way'. So yesterday, I put them on the right way.

"I agree with him. I think it certainly stops the glare. Yeah, I'll be wearing them (in the Test)."

Smith was also firm in putting forward that his view on batting orders differed to one held by Cummins and Head, who have both labelled them "overrated".

McDonald has floated the idea of a hybrid order and the selection of Inglis could facilitate that, which Smith did concede could be suited to day-night cricket.

"Pink ball, anything's possible," he said. "We've been pretty open in the past around maybe having two nightwatchmen and things like that. It's a completely different game. You've got to play what's in front of you at any given stage.

"But I'm not sure I completely agree with those two (Cummins and Head) on batting orders being overrated. It's nice to be in a similar role and get used to that role over and over again.

"It can change in games, and maybe that's the way forward. But having certain spots for one innings and other spots for a second innings, I'm not sure.

"It's nice to have a single role and try to get used to that as much as possible."

It is believed some in the Australian camp were earlier this week comparing this Gabba pitch to the character of the one used for 2016's first day-night Test at this venue.

In that match, Pakistan went close to pulling off a miracle fourth-innings run chase as the home side's bowlers struggled to make inroads with a lifeless pink ball.

Gabba curator Dave Sandurski has insisted the surface had been prepared the same way as the one produced for West Indies' surprise win over Australia for a day-night Test in January 2024, while also confirming his aim to prepare a similar pitch to the one Queensland won inside three days on against Victoria in the Sheffield last month.

What has also surely been discussed by the Aussies is the possibility of more rapid-fire Tests like the one that finished inside two days in Perth.

Lyon bowled only two overs for the match there. He has played in all of Australia's pink-ball Tests at home, only missing the one played abroad in the Caribbean this year, but his record at the Gabba is not as formidable as his one at Adelaide Oval under lights.

"We'll look at the surface and we'll sum things up from there," Smith said of Lyon. "Here's a place where Nathan's done really well in the past. He's a quality bowler but we'll weigh up the options and see how we go."

 
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