Pakistan to Pakistan. Bazball Two Years On – Will It Stand The Test Of Time?

England’s recent defeat in Pakistan signals about two and a half years since the start of the Stokes/McCullum tenure, and about 2 years since the 3-0 romping by England, last time out, in Pakistan.

These two years are intriguing, and the conclusion of the 2022 Pakistan series marked a shift in people’s perception of the Bazball ideology. The novelty of aggressive and entertaining cricket was by no means wearing off, but instead questions were raised about the sustainability of such an approach across an 18 month period that included the Ashes and an away trip to India.

People talk about the idea of the journey being more important than the destination, and the one that Stokes and McCullum and Co. have taken us on over the last 24 months has been filled with drama, disappointment, thrill, and everything in between. It’s been one of the most pivotal two-year periods in English red ball history, and it’s one I’m keen to explore.

After Pakistan “22, the next time England played a test series was February 2023, away, in New Zealand. One of the less watched contests under McCullum and Stokes, the first of two tests against The Kiwis was a microcosm of everything we had come to expect from England, under the new leadership group; including an aggressive declaration, runs from Harry Brook and Joe Root, a short cameo from Stuart Broad batting at 4 and ultimately England emerging victorious.

The series would finish 1-1 after a thrilling finish to the second test which saw New Zealand, after following on, bowl England out for 256 in the fourth innings, just 2 shy of their 258 run target.

Despite only getting a draw England’s absolute commitment to ultra-positive cricket foreshadowed what would be the most enthralling ashes series for a generation.

Back to the present for a moment. England are coming off the back of a really disappointing series in Pakistan where, in spite of scoring 823/7 in one innings, they were beaten, comprehensively by the opposition’s spinners. This has been met by a wave of criticism from pundits, and in particular ex-players. The man who seems to be bearing the bulk of this scrutiny is Ollie Pope and from my perspective, this seems unfair and rather fickle.

When Jurgen Klopp joined Liverpool in 2015 Adam Lallana was not the best player at the club, but he was one of the first to buy into the culture that the German manager proposed, and without him, there is an argument that Liverpool don’t have such profound success so quickly.

Now it’s important to note here that I think Ollie Pope will go onto have a more prosperous career playing for England than Lallana had playing for Liverpool, but the idea rings true nonetheless.

Even beyond the cultural impact Pope has had in bringing about England’s change in fortune the most recent domestic summer saw him captain England to a series win against Sri Lanka, score 1x 100, 1x 150 and win player of the match in a test against the West Indies. One poor series, off the back of a successful summer, in conditions that even, in the case of the second and third test, the most successful struggled in doesn’t seem like cause for execution.

This isolated incident represents what I believe a wider problem to be in English cricket, and more positively why I think Bazball will stand the test of time.

In an era where so much analysis and commentary from pundits and ex-players is black and white, offering unwavering support when results are positive but calling for heads when the chips are down, England just don’t seem to care. They’ve made a big show of coming out in press conferences and saying they don’t care about the results only entertainment; I don’t think this is true. They’re professional athletes, of course they want to win, those are just outlandish statements to get the underlying point across – “no matter how much positive or negative support this gets, we’re sticking to our guns, we’re going to play this way”.

I think it’s working.

It was by no means the biggest event of the 2023 Ashes series, but I vividly remember where I was when Zac Crawley pumped Pat Cummins through the off side to get us underway for the best series of test cricket I’ve ever watched.

I was making a sandwich, with the game open on my laptop and volume turned right up. To hear the English crowd and commentators roar, just as their Australian counterparts had two years earlier, as Mitchell Starc’s half volley had crashed into Rory Burns’ leg stump, was blissful.

I won’t dwell for too long on the intricacies of each test match as after two documentaries and a BBC Sport advent calendar I feel as though those who want to be up to date on it, are so. But, in my eyes, it was the greatest test series for a generation.

I’ve mentioned the first ball here because it continues my point. In the runup to the series there was so much anticipation and discourse around Bazball, and “would England continue to play in the same way?”. For Zac Crawley to stand and deliver off the first ball of the series was a statement and it rung true all summer.

Thinking back now, we get swept up in “What if Manchester?” and Broad’s fairytale finish but there was a point where we were 2-0 down and on the brink of losing The Ashes and so much of what Stokes and McCullum had worked for was looking like it would be undone.

There was a great deal of noise. Cries that this new style of play couldn’t work against the highest quality test nations. But this didn’t appear to permeate the walls of The Bazball camp. To come back from 2-0 down in Ashes series and be within touching distance of regaining the urn takes tremendous amounts of mental strength; arguably more than we give these boys credit for.

England have just lost in Pakistan and the media is calling for heads. All of a sudden, despite accumulating the 4th highest test score of all time, after two test match losses the selection methodology of Stokes and McCullum is flawed.

We’ve been here before; we’ve seen this before.

Analysis in cricket is too black and white, and Bazball will stand the test of time.

England were 2-0 down in the ashes and no negativity, seemingly, permeated the Bazball bubble. Stokes and McCullum made slight adjustments within a squad of players they had picked and we went from The Ashes almost being over with 2 tests still to play, to being within one sunny day of a historic test series victory.

Bazball doesn’t just refer to a manner of playing Test Match Cricket, it outlines a culture. There are clips of Stuart Broad explaining how they want the dressing room to be a haven of positivity, and the way Broad specifically went about implementing it is by stating something positive every time he enters the room. It could be about his morning walk, or his coffee. With the excitement there is around playing for England at the moment, and the constant stream of new young players coming into the setup, this positivity doesn’t feel like something that is fading, or will begin to soon.

Despite losing to Pakistan, history indicates that England won’t let this negativity get to them. There were good signs throughout the seires as well; Jamie Smith was excellent in conditions that were tough for a keeper and our batting, when not spinning sideways, looks to be in an excellent space.

I can’t wait for the Ashes.

Words by Henry Eccles

England Shocked by West Indies in WT20 World Cup Upset

The West Indies’ comprehensive six-wicket win against England was Women’s Cricket’s biggest upset of the year and saw one of the favourites dumped out of the WT20 World Cup in the UAE. The final group game served as a de facto quarter-final, with England’s first innings score of 141 made to look diminutive by powerful West Indian hitting.

England, a major powerhouse on and off the pitch, were perfect across the last home summer, accumulating 13 wins from 13 completed games. Typically, bilateral series are where they play their best cricket, too often unable to manage the intense scrutiny of knockout matches. Their group stage exit in this year’s edition follows semi-final heartbreak at the last WT20 World Cup, the 2022 Commonwealth Games, as well as a crushing 50-over World Cup final loss against Australia in 2022.

England dropping five catches against the West Indies was indicative of a team feeling the pressure, conscious of their recent past. Windies opener Qiana Joseph, promoted to the top of the order despite a batting average of 14, took advantage of England’s mediocrity and rose to the most significant occasion of her sporting career. The Saint Lucian smeared England’s attack to all corners on the way to a career-best 52. In conjunction with Deandra Dottin, the team’s talisman, they exhibited the brute force that exists across the Caribbean, to which England had no answer.

The West Indies’ achievement is even more impressive when considering the economic disparity between the two teams. England will have eight entirely professional regional women’s teams by 2025, whilst the West Indies can only afford a skeletal system that supports a small number of centrally contracted players.

Grenadian Leg spinner Afy Fletcher, who stung England through the middle overs and claimed the best figures of the match (3/21), is isolated from the sparse coaching in the Caribbean for most of the year. Rather than spending her days in a high-performance centre, she predominantly trains independently with her partner, a local club cricketer.

In contrast, England’s domestic pathway has been transformed since the pandemic. Only Australia, who have dominated women’s cricket for a decade, has similar opportunities and resources available to female cricketers.

England enjoy comparisons to the all-conquering Australian Women’s side, but in the recent past, they haven’t won the trophies to justify them. Failure to qualify from the group stages was made all the more painful when Australia went on to be knocked out by South Africa in the semi-finals; England have missed a golden opportunity to make up ground on the old enemy. Fortunately, 2025 is another World Cup year, and they’ll be given every opportunity to banish their tournament demons.

Words by Markus Conneely

England’s Yorkshire stars take centre stage in Pakistan (Updated Version)

Sitting here in Harry Brook and Joe Root’s native Yorkshire as the rain lashes at the windows, one could be forgiven for thinking Multan (Pakistan) was on a different planet, such was the sweltering heat and aridity on show over the past two weeks. Yet in truth the pair, cruising to England’s record test partnership as they set the team up for victory in the first test produced an archetype for subcontinent batting, and seemed more at home than their Pakistani counterparts.

This Pakistan side continue to be a source of deep confusion. A side containing two high class fast bowlers in Naseem Shah and Shaheen Shah Afridi and batters (including the talismanic Babar Azam and Mo Rizwan) who are surely capable of scoring big runs, collapsed in the first test, resulting in a dramatic overhaul of some of many of its star names – including Babar and Shaheen.  

Make no mistake about it, England needed the win. Just as Multan appeared worlds apart from Yorkshire, this iteration of Bazball appears a long way from the halcyon days of 2022, with a shock defeat to Sri Lanka and a battering in India leaving McCollum not without his critics. This display, then, could be seen as a model for a more refined, considered ‘Bazball’. At its core remains an emphasis on player freedom and expression, but without the recklessness  they have sometimes been accused of playing with. 

It is a damning indictment on a side so full of talent, that Pakistan’s best option for success in the 2nd test was to roll the dice: craft a raging turner and hope they win the toss, and England’s batters fail more spectacularly than their own.  

In effect, that is what happened. In an unprecedented decision in test match cricket the surface on which the first test had been played was re-used for the second match of the series. This resulted in a hugely eroded, weathered surface and the Pakistani spinners Noman Ali and Sajid Khan combined to take all 20 of the England wickets and see them to victory. Whilst the series is level at 1-1, the nature of the pitch makes it tough to assess where the teams are in relation to one another. A debut hundred for Kamran Ghulam and the continued success of Agha Salman are certainly big positives for Pakistan though, whilst England have surely unearthed a key bowler for their Ashes prospects in Brydon Carse, and Ben Duckett’s 4th Test Hundred has solidified his spot at the top of the order for the foreseeable future. 

The focus though is rightly on Brook and Root, who will be central to England’s chances of winning the series next week. It would be unfair on Root to describe this series as a ‘changing of the guard’ moment – he is simply the best batter in the world right now – but it has demonstrated for all to see, that just as Yorkshire has produced stars of England’s past and present, in Brook they may just have done so for the future as well. 

Words by Freddie Waterland

“Yorkshire’s Finest: Brook and Root Ignite England Success in Multan”

Sitting here in Harry Brook and Joe Root’s native Yorkshire as the rain lashes at the windows, one could be forgiven for thinking Multan (Pakistan) was on a different planet, such was the sweltering heat and aridity on show this week. Yet in truth, the pair, cruising to England’s record test partnership as they set the team up for victory, seemed more at home than their Pakistani counterparts. 

Wharton breaks through at Headingley to start the Yorkshire party

James Wharton top-scored for Yorkshire in their final Vitality County Championship match against
Northamptonshire at Headingley. With his side’s promotion to Division One confirmed on
Saturday, Wharton entered the final day of the season with his maiden double-century in view,
before reaching an eventual score of 285.