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Ashes 2025-26: Australia vs England | 5th Test | Sydney | January 04-08 | Pre-Match Discussion

The Bald Eagle

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The 2025-26 Ashes series heads to its finale in Sydney with a mix of celebration and high stakes. While Australia secured the Urn early by winning the first three Tests, England arrives at the SCG with renewed momentum after a historic, chaotic victory in the Boxing Day Test at the MCG.

England’s 4-wicket victory at the MCG was their first Test win on Australian soil in 5,468 days (since January 2011). Having finally "broken the hoodoo," Ben Stokes and Joe Root will be desperate to finish the tour with a 3-2 scoreline, which would represent a remarkable comeback from 3-0 down.

Teams:

Australia: Travis Head, Jake Weatherald, Marnus Labuschagne, Steven Smith(c), Usman Khawaja, Alex Carey(w), Cameron Green, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jhye Richardson, Scott Boland

England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes(c), Jamie Smith(w), Will Jacks, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue
 
If Atkinson's out, then Potts would be a reasonable replacement although I would have liked to see Olly Stone in their squad.
Aus needs to make a good batting strip so spin can come into play.
 
Aus will go for another 2 day test .with so many bowling options not available, Aussies dont want a bazball on their own turf against their bowlers.Its proven beyond any doubt that boland and other pacers are mediocre .They need a spicy wicket to up their avgs otherwise they are utter garbage. To protect them , only 2 day wickets are required.
 
Waiting for another Test that finishes in 2 days... ICC should take notice of such pathetic games...
 
Quality of cricket has been forgetable in this series. Series with 5 tests was done and dusted within 10-11 days with 2 tests lasting less than 2 days. It wasn't even 2 days, it was 140 overs or less for 2 tests. So 2 tests lasted one and half days.
 
What a lot of fans don't get is while Australia has already won the Ashes, a whitewash has it's own unique flavor. Something that Australia has always enjoyed against Pakistan during every series at home since 1998.​
 
'State of shock': Cricket reckons with two-day pitch fiasco

Cricket Australia chief flags a $10m hit from rapid finish and end-of-season review on how pitches are prepared

The demons of the 2017-18 Ashes bore-draw was the chief factor in the Melbourne Cricket Club producing a Boxing Day pitch tilted too heavily towards favouring fast bowling, and which failed to get the fourth Ashes Test into a third day.

Cricket Australia chief executive Todd Greenberg has vowed that his organisation would undertake an end-of-season review of the management of Test wickets around the country as administrators grapple with balancing a preference for seam-friendly surfaces with the aggressive batting tactics teams are now using to combat them.

Greenberg expects the financial shortfall from this week's lost days of cricket to cost CA more than $10 million, conceding the deficit "stings" after forfeiting around half that amount last month from this series’ other two-day Test in Perth.

"With the way batters are batting, and the way the game is evolving, are the preparation of our wickets in lockstep with that?" Greenberg said on Sunday. "If they're not, how do we make sure that they are so that we can try to balance the commercial imperatives versus the performance?"

The Melbourne Cricket Club today took responsibility for a regrettable surface that produced 36 wickets in only 142 overs. Head curator Matt Page explained he left 10mm of grass on the drop-in surface in anticipation of hot weather during the back part of the Test, the biggest on this country's cricket calendar.

The verdict from the International Cricket Council’s match referee Jeff Crowe was expected to land on Monday at the latest. Players and administrators are understood to be bracing for an "unsatisfactory" rating.

A third straight 90,000-plus crowd was expected on Sunday but the fans who showed up in glorious sunshine had to settle for a hastily arranged autograph-signing session by Australian players in Yarra Park.

Page has earnt widespread plaudits for reinvigorating an MCG pitch that reached a low point in 2017 when more than 1,000 runs were scored and only 24 wickets were taken in a turgid five-day drawn Ashes Test.

The aftermath of that has seen the MCC, along with CA, lean towards providing seam-friendly conditions that promote more entertaining cricket. That Channel Seven announced this Melbourne Test reached its largest TV and streaming audience underlined the sense that viewers have enjoyed the shift.

But Page admitted he had been in a "state of shock" to find he had tilted the balance too far towards fast bowlers.

"I've never been involved in a Test match like it, and hopefully am never involved in a Test match like it again," Page told reporters as the iconic venue's turf boss admirably fronted reporters on Sunday. "It was a rollercoaster ride for two days to see everything unfold."

Page had been surprised by the amount of bounce this week's wicket offered after it spent a whole day under covers last Sunday when the ground received 25mm of rain.

This MCG pitch actually had less grass on it than the one he produced for the 2021-22 Ashes Test (which sported 11mm), as well as the 2019-20 Test against New Zealand (12mm). Those matches finished in three and four days respectively.

There was widespread sympathy for the tightrope curators walk and the number of variables they must take into consideration when producing a Test pitch.

"I feel for him," said Australia opener Travis Head, whose third-innings 46 was the highest score of the Test. "It's bloody tough.

"You leave 1 or 2mm on with high-quality bowling, you find yourself short, or you take 2 or 3mm with high-quality batting and you leave yourself the other way.

"Everyone wants to see someone win. Everyone wants to see wickets. No one wants to see a bloke get 300. There needs to be a balance, and sometimes we're going to see the balance, like last week (the third Test in Adelaide) err to the batters, and some weeks we're going to see it err to the bowlers."

The curator's conundrum was illustrated by the fact Page's data suggested the 2023-24 Pakistan Test wicket produced more seam movement than this week despite that pitch featuring only 8mm of grass. Last summer's five-day epic against India was played on a surface featuring 7mm.

"We don't want to go back to where we were in 2017," said Page, who moved to the 'G in 2018 having been brought across from the WACA in Perth.

"Our grass is vitally important to what we do. We don't get inconsistent bounce, we don't get deterioration in our pitches and we're trying to balance that contest between bat and ball over the four or five days to provide that captivating Test for all.

"We left it longer because we knew we were going to get weather at the back end that we knew we needed our grass for. You look back at it and you go well, 'It's favoured the bowlers too much day one, day two'.

"If that doesn't happen, then we set ourselves up really good for day three, day four."

Greenberg had flagged after a 20-wicket opening day in Melbourne that CA would be forced to consider whether it needs to have a greater say on how Test wickets are prepared.

Unlike other countries, groundstaff at Australian venues remain fiercely independent. But the commercial realities of fast-forward Tests have been laid bare in recent weeks after the Ashes series commenced with a two-day Test at Perth Stadium.

The pitch for that match was rated "very good" by the ICC, underscoring the difficulty Greenberg faces in the aftermath of his first Ashes series as CEO.

"Clearly the preparation of wickets has such a material impact on us as a business, and so I don't think we can just simply sit around without asking some questions of ourselves," he said.

"What that looks like, I'm not sure. Don't get me wrong – you're not going to see us on the roller and trying to take over wicket preparation.

"We've been very good in this country at trusting those in each of our stadiums to prepare wickets with characteristics that are unique to each of them.

"I'm not suggesting we change that, but we want to have a little bit of insight into what we're about to expect and some of the expectations we will have at our venues. I don't know exactly how that will play out.

"But I don't think I can sit here with a straight face and say that we won't look at that given we've experienced two two-day Tests in the last four Tests."

 
The 2025-26 Ashes series heads to its finale in Sydney with a mix of celebration and high stakes. While Australia secured the Urn early by winning the first three Tests, England arrives at the SCG with renewed momentum after a historic, chaotic victory in the Boxing Day Test at the MCG.

England’s 4-wicket victory at the MCG was their first Test win on Australian soil in 5,468 days (since January 2011). Having finally "broken the hoodoo," Ben Stokes and Joe Root will be desperate to finish the tour with a 3-2 scoreline, which would represent a remarkable comeback from 3-0 down.

Teams:

Australia: Travis Head, Jake Weatherald, Marnus Labuschagne, Steven Smith(c), Usman Khawaja, Alex Carey(w), Cameron Green, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jhye Richardson, Scott Boland

England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes(c), Jamie Smith(w), Will Jacks, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue
Teams 🙄
 
Sydney is going to be a good batting deck . ENG will replce Atkins with either Potts or Fisher & Bashir should come in for Jacks .
AUS will replace Jhye with Murphy [who is ordinary imo ] & I still think Webster should be in 11 .
Light rain is predicted on day 3 & 5 of Test !
 
Sydney is going to be a good batting deck . ENG will replce Atkins with either Potts or Fisher & Bashir should come in for Jacks .
AUS will replace Jhye with Murphy [who is ordinary imo ] & I still think Webster should be in 11 .
Light rain is predicted on day 3 & 5 of Test !
Watching Swepson bowl in BBL ,he would have been a perfect fit in 11 for Sydney .
If AUS had any sense , they would replace Jhye & Josh with Swepson & Webster .
 
Cricket Australia need to try and make some money.
They lost money last year (somehow) despite the biggest money spinner in world cricket (ie India) touring.
Because of Perth and Melbourne they have lost money again — several state heads are vocally calling for the CEO to go for mismanagement.
This will be a flat deck ideally filling the stadium for five days …. anyway, looks like rain could be the winner
 
Internal political pressure after MCG-gate to produce a super flat wicket and ensure five days of play in the annual Pink Test, along with some showers forecast, should see this one playing out as a high scoring draw and a 3-1 series.

Of course both batting lineups are suspect, so either could still contrive to have a mad session somewhere and lose it.
 
Australian second string bowling was awful. Bowling at 130k on an average. I am sure they have faster bowlers but lack of first class experience. Still very poor with keepr standing up on Australian pitches. Although strategy worked it is also a reflection how Australian pace stock is. Australian wickets reward relentless bowlers. Guys like CUmmins, Hazlewood due to their height can extract boucne off a good length.These other guys look like proper trundlers.
 
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