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Australia (132 & 205/2) defeat England (172 & 164) by 8 wickets to win 1st Ashes Test and take 1-0 in 5-match series

Which team will win the first Ashes Test?


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The Bald Eagle

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The Ashes returns, and with it comes cricket’s most storied rivalry as England and Australia prepare to write the next chapter in a battle that has defined generations. The previous Ashes series in England delivered drama, entertainment and unforgettable cricket, and from the moment it ended, the build-up to this contest down under has been relentless. Both sides enter the series with contrasting builds but equally high expectations. Australia, the current holders of the urn, have had their share of injury concerns in the lead-up to this battle, whereas England, under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum, arrive with a brand of cricket that has reshaped their Test fortunes and reinvigorated their identity. It all kicks off at the Perth Stadium before the caravan moves to Brisbane for the day-night Test, then on to Adelaide and Melbourne, with the final Test to be played in Sydney. For Australia, it became a race against time for their talismanic skipper Pat Cummins after he was diagnosed with a lumbar stress injury earlier in the year. The hosts will be without him for the opener, though he has started bowling in the nets and is likely to be fit for the second Test. Cummins’ absence was anticipated, but what has come as an unexpected blow is the unavailability of Josh Hazlewood, who picked up a hamstring injury in a recent Sheffield Shield match. In Cummins’ absence, Steve Smith will lead the side and command a new-look pace attack. Mitchell Starc will spearhead the attack in Perth, while Scott Boland, less experienced than Starc but with proven credentials in Australian conditions, looks set to feature. The third seamer is likely to be Brendan Doggett, although Michael Neser has been drafted in as cover following Hazlewood’s injury. There may not be much on offer for the spinners in Perth, but Nathan Lyon should come into play as the series progresses. With the bat, Sam Konstas, who featured in all three Tests in the West Indies, has been omitted after failing to make a significant impact. Jake Weatherald is in line for a debut and is expected to partner Usman Khawaja at the top. Marnus Labuschagne returns to the Test fold following an impressive Sheffield Shield campaign. The batting core remains stable with Steve Smith, Travis Head and Alex Carey, while Josh Inglis provides wicketkeeping cover. Australia also boast two quality all-rounders in Beau Webster and Cameron Green, with Green likely to get the nod considering the quality he provides with both bat and ball.

On the other hand, England arrive to reclaim the Ashes urn, which they last held in 2015, but the task at hand is a formidable one. This is arguably the sternest examination yet for the Stokes-McCullum era. Their last tour down under came in 2021-22, where Australia handed them a 4-0 hammering. Stokes leads a side containing only five players who have previously played a Test in Australia, including the skipper himself. England, who usually announce their playing XI a day or two before a Test, have instead named a 12-man squad this time, keeping their cards close to their chest regarding team balance. The key decision revolves around whether they opt for an all-pace attack or include Shoaib Bashir as the lone specialist spinner. The headline from the squad announcement was Mark Wood overcoming a hamstring scare he sustained in the warm-up game against the England Lions. Alongside Wood, Jofra Archer, Gus Atkinson and Brydon Carse give the tourists a varied set of pace options should they go with an all-seam lineup, with Stokes himself also a bowling option. On the batting front, England arrived in Australia with a largely settled lineup, with the only question surrounding Ollie Pope’s spot. After Harry Brook replaced Pope as vice-captain following the India series, there were speculations that Pope might not retain the number 3 position, with Jacob Bethell touted as a possible replacement. However, Pope quietened all debate with a century and a 90 in the warm-up fixture against the Lions, sealing his place in the XI. The rest of the batting unit is settled, with Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett pairing up top, followed by the Yorkshire master and apprentice in Joe Root and Harry Brook, with Ben Stokes and the wicketkeeper Jamie Smith to follow. England have been winless on their last three tours down under, and their record in Ashes openers in Australia does not make for encouraging reading either. The last time they began an away Ashes series with a win was back in the 1986-87 tour in Brisbane. Despite those numbers, with Australia missing both Cummins and Hazlewood for the opener, this feels like a huge opportunity for Stokes and Co. to land the first punch. Two heavyweights are set to leave nothing in the tank, but who will strike the opening blow?

Australia Squad (First Test): Steve Smith (Captain), 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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Brother @mominsaigol needs your insights.... although England look confident for the first Test in absence of Hazlewood and Cummins.
 
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It would be interesting to see the fast bowling lineup for Australia in the absence of Cummins and Hazlewood. Also, whether England play with Bashir and Bethell in the playing xi.
 
England need to take down this bunch of oldies that is Australia.

Starc, Boland, Doggett, Lyon, Webster, Green

VS

Archer, Wood, Carse, Stokes
 
Australia lock in playing XI for first Ashes Test in Perth

Two debutants confirmed for Australia, as Marnus Labuschagne earns a recall and Beau Webster is dropped for the first Test against England.

Stand-in Australia captain Steve Smith has confirmed the XI his side will use for the opening Ashes Test against England in Perth.

The Aussies will unveil two debutants for the eagerly-awaited ICC World Test Championship contest, with opener Jake Weatherald and pacer Brendan Doggett both named in the XI as predicted by Australian great Ricky Ponting on The ICC Review earlier this week.

It means all-rounder Beau Webster drops out of the XI despite some good performances in recent times, with Marnus Labuschagne earning a recall near the top of the batting order at No.3 and Cameron Green also included in the top six.

Labuschagne returns to the XI after he was dropped from the side following the World Test Championship Final against South Africa in June, with the right-hander having missed out on the three-match tour of the Caribbean against the West Indies that followed.

The former No.1 ranked Test batter has since contributed bulk runs at domestic level in Australia and Smith said it has proven enough to win a recall.

"Marnus, when he's batting at his best at No.3, he makes us a very good cricket side," Smith said on Thursday.

"We couldn't really leave him out after he came back and did exactly what was told of him.

"The way he's batted in Shield and one-day cricket for Queensland in the last couple of weeks has been amazing, so when he's batting well, he's tough to leave out and hopefully he can bring that to the Test arena now.

"For Beau, he's the one that misses out unfortunately. He came into international cricket and lit it up immediately – it's a really tough one on him."

Doggett will partner experienced quicks Mitchell Starc and Scott Boland in the pace department, while veteran right-armer Nathan Lyon will be the main spinner.

Regular pacers Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood miss out, with Smith confident Doggett can fill the void on debut.

"Injuries happen in sport, particularly in cricket with fast bowlers, they put a lot of stress through their bodies," Smith noted.

"Unfortunate that those two are out. But an exciting opportunity for Scotty (Boland) and for Brendan Doggett to make his debut.

"Brendan's been on a few tours with Australia. He is very skilful. I think he's improved a hell of a lot the last few years and I'm excited to see him go about his business."

It is just the first time since 2019 that Australia have named two debutants in the same Test side and you have to go way back to 2011 to find the last Ashes Test the Aussies did so.

Australia XI: Jake Weatherald, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith (c), Travis Head, Cameron Green, Alex Carey (wk), Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Brendan Doggett, Scott Boland

ICC
 
Webster was thorn for us in 5th test at Sydney earlier this year. He is dropped for injury prone Green.

Green could break down again.
 
England 'have been building to this moment' - McCullum

Coach Brendon McCullum believes his England team are ready for an Ashes series that could "define" them.

McCullum and captain Ben Stokes have revitalised the England Test team since taking charge in 2022.

The New Zealander said they have been "building to this moment", with the first Test against Australia in Perth beginning on Friday (02:20 GMT).

In his only interview since arriving in Australia, McCullum told BBC Sport: "There's nothing bigger than what we're about to come into."

Speaking to Test Match Special commentator and former England spinner Phil Tufnell, McCullum added: "This team has been together for a good couple of years and we have been building towards this moment.

"It is the biggest stage and it is the brightest lights. It is a series that could define teams, the people and players within it. That's OK.

"You know you're ready, you know you have the game to compete at this level. Stay together, play the style you have become accustomed to and we'll see in a couple of months where we land."

England are due to confirm their XI for the first Test on Thursday, with spinner Shoaib Bashir likely to miss out from the 12-man squad named on Wednesday.

That would mean the tourists will field a five-man pace attack, probably the fastest group of bowlers they have ever put together for a Test match.

"I'm super excited and probably a little bit more relaxed now than I was a few weeks ago," said former New Zealand captain McCullum.

"We've got our team to the start line. I feel like our horse is going to run well. Whether we find another horse in the race that is better than us, who knows."

England had won only one their previous 17 Tests, including a 4-0 defeat on their last Ashes tour, when McCullum and Stokes united in the summer of 2022.

They revolutionised England's style of play, built a new team with a number of young players and earned impressive series wins at home against New Zealand and South Africa, then again against the Kiwis and Pakistan.

But England have not managed a victory in a marquee five-Test series against either Australia or India, including a 2-2 draw in the last home Ashes in 2023.

England have not won a single Test in Australia since their last series win in this country 14 years ago. Only five England teams have won Ashes series in Australia since World War II.

England 12-man squad: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (captain), Jamie Smith, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Mark Wood, Jofra Archer, Shoaib Bashir.

Australia XI: Usman Khawaja, Jake Weatherald, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith (captain), Travis Head, Cameron Green, Alex Carey, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Scott Boland, Brendan Doggett.

"For this team, it will define the progress we've made," said McCullum. "For Stokesy to be able to lead an England team to an Ashes win away from home would be huge.

"We understand all of that stuff, but it's about living in the moment and dealing with what comes. We'll be challenged on this tour. We'll have good days and bad days.

"As long as we keep moving towards the target, then we'll give ourselves the best chance."

England have received a hostile reception in Perth, attracting attention from the West Australian newspaper. Thursday's front page labelled the visitors "arrogant Bazballing Poms".

McCullum said the hype around the Ashes is "pretty cool", comparing it to the low-key nature of his time playing for New Zealand.

"I feel lucky to be in the position we're in. We understand the size of the task, but we ain't trying to cure cancer. We're trying to win a few games of cricket. We're trying to represent all that has gone before, live in the moment and achieve the task at hand.

"Yes, there is going to be pressure, but just be yourself, lads. Do the best job you possibly can and we'll see where we land."

On Wednesday, Stokes called on his team to "create history". The opening Test will be the all-rounder's first appearance since injuring his shoulder in July and McCullum said Stokes is "absolutely flying".

"Emotionally he is in the best place I've seen him," said McCullum. "From a leadership point of view I've not seen him in a better space. He's ready to go. He knows this is a huge moment for him."

Stokes has not completed any of England's past four series because of various injuries and his ability to stay fit for the five Tests will be crucial to his team's chances of lifting the urn.

"The last couple of injuries I've had have been a race against time from getting injured to the next series," Stokes told BBC Sport. "This one was months away and the injury itself, it was seven or eight weeks before I was bowling again, so I had loads of time to get my loads back up and get everything in order."

Stokes will take his place in the England attack, probably along express paceman Mark Wood, who is set to play his first Test since August 2024 after elbow and knee injuries.

"He's flying," said Stokes. "He's had all his injury troubles and all that kind of stuff, but he's been bowling for a long, long time.

"He has always been someone who can just hit the ground running in a game. He's bowling rapid."

Australia are without captain Pat Cummins and fellow pace bowler Josh Hazlewood, with Steve Smith stepping up as skipper.

The home side have named their XI. Opener Jake Weatherald and pace bowler Brendan Doggett are handed debuts, and all-rounder Beau Webster misses out.

In a bizarre address to the media, Smith took aim at former England spinner Monty Panesar.

Panesar previously said England should make Smith "feel guilty" about his role in the Sandpapergate ball-tampering scandal against South Africa, which cost the batter his job as full-time Australia captain in 2018.

Smith referred to Panesar's appearance on BBC TV show Mastermind, when he managed only one correct answer.

"I'm going to go off topic here," said Smith. "Who of you in the room has seen Mastermind, and Monty Panesar on that? Any of you?

"Those of you that have will understand where I'm coming from. If you haven't, do yourself a favour because it is pretty comical.

"Anyone who believes that Athens is in Germany, Oliver Twist is a season of the year, and America is a city, it doesn't really bother me those comments. That's as far as I'll go with that one."

BBC
 
Disappointing to see Webster dropped. He has been a fantastic addition to the side over the largely inconsistent Marsh. He has played a number of crucial knocks for Australia when they needed it most.
 
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Meanwhile, England’s record in Australia since 2010 in the Ashes paints a brutal picture:

2013/14: Lost 5–0 ❌
2017/18: Lost 4–0 ❌
2021/22: Lost 4–0 ❌

Sometimes the numbers speak louder than the banter 👀
 
England can win this one give the.missing of two bowlers. But my interest whether this will live up to its hype. Boland is very old too.
 
Best series for me. One team is going to brutality exposed and I will take care of that ,Don't care about The result who win or Lose . :klopp :kl
 
Best series for me. One team is going to brutality exposed and I will take care of that ,Don't care about The result who win or Lose . :klopp :kl
Hahaha...I can understand. One from the last year, and one from this year...But obviously bigger enemy would be the prime target
 
I hope England don’t play bashir. Joe root can bowl as well as him or even better. Don’t waste a spot
 
Don't care whoever wins, but rooting for Root to score big runs...as it's all about breaking records
Spicey pitch are awaiting for root and co. But at the same time This is weakest Australia team to Play at home since more than a decade.

Let's see England FTB can score this time.

:kp
 
Looking forward to tomorrow and the next few weeks. Very few test series have this level of fanfare around them. Hopefully England can show some spine and compete this time around. I don't think anyone expects them to win the series.
 
Just found England has never played at the Optus. This is the first time. This pitch is not always spicy. Against West Indies they rolled out a road where Steve smith, Marnus made double centuries. Today they have rolled out a reasonably spicy pitch like they did against India.
 
Today they have rolled out a reasonably spicy pitch like they did against India.
Nz used to do it against us till 2004 and occasionally there after.They will prepare green tracks as we don't have pacers .Completely dead tracks for others such as pak, saffers, aus.
 
Australia's issue will be 1st change, 2nd change. With Boland not being effective they have nowhere to run. How is this brendan doggert?
 
Boland seems to be certainly targeted by bazballers . Definitely its tough for him on docile pitches especially mcg and Adelaide.
 
Here comes root Indians will be cursing every run he makes in the next couple of months !
Can we not bring Ind. into every thread. Just appreciate the Ashes.

Anyway, Root is gone for duck. Judging by your comment, Indians are rejoicing.
 
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