The Chronicle

Taking game to Aussies key to turning Ashes, insists Malan

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DAWID Malan believes England can reignite their Ashes campaign by tapping into the mindset that has driven their success in white-ball cricket.

England have been outclassed by Australia in each of the first two Tests, meaning their Boxing Day assignment in front of 70,000 at Melbourne’s MCG is make-or-break.

The portents are not good, with 11 defeats and one draw in their last 12 Tests on Australia soil – a sorry sequence spanning three tours.

Yet there is no fear factor where limited-overs cricket is concerned. When the sides met in the T20 World Cup just a few weeks before the Ashes, England romped home by eight wickets with 50 balls unused as Jos Buttler clubbed a century against a familiar looking bowling attack comprising Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc.

The fearlessly aggressive methods that have transforme­d England into an elite limitedove­rs operation in cricket under Eoin Morgan – they are world champions in ODIs and world number ones in T20s – can hardly be transporte­d into the five-day format, but Malan feels there are useful lessons about how to confront their rivals.

“The boys are hurting after our performanc­es in the last two games. They realise we haven’t been good enough across all facets of the game,” he said.

“Speaking to all the guys everyone is up for the challenge, everyone is really keen to face up to the Australian­s. We do it in white-ball cricket, we take them on and there’s a lot of the white-ball players in this group as well.

“Hopefully we can get that mindset and not just go into our shells trying to survive but actually try and take the game to them. The boys want to win the series still. I know it’s a long way to come but we have to do well and play our best cricket to get ourselves back in the series.”

Malan suggested that England’s predicamen­t was partly down to a lack of Test experience on Australian pitches.

He and captain Joe Root are the only two top-seven batters who had played an away Ashes trip before and they have been the best performers by a distance. England hoped others would get up to speed during a training camp in Queensland in November but persistent rain wrecked those plans.

“We are almost learning on the job in Test matches because a lot of the guys haven’t played in Australia, so they are facing bowlers they’ve never faced before and getting used to the bounce out here,” he said. “The beauty of playing cricket in Australia is that it’s tough, it’s hard, it’s brutal and you have to be at your best to win. We haven’t been that so far.”

Bairstow is among the options under considerat­ion for a recall, with Ollie Pope under serious pressure at number six. Zak Craw ley appears highly likely to open the batting, w ith both

Rory

Burns and Haseeb Hameed short of runs.

Durham star

Mark Wood will return to the attack after controvers­ially being rested last time out, with Chris Woakes likely to sit out.

 ?? ?? England’s Dawid Malan during the press conference at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne yesterday
England’s Dawid Malan during the press conference at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne yesterday

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