The Irish Mail on Sunday

Desperate England wield axe in last chance saloon

- By Sam Lovett

ENGLAND have swung the axe for today’s must-win Test against Australia, making four changes to the team in Melbourne. Most significan­tly, the tourists have lost patience with their misfiring batting unit, benching Surrey duo Rory Burns and Ollie Pope in favour of the returning Zak Crawley and Jonny Bairstow.

Elsewhere, the bowling has been rotated once again, with Mark Wood back after being rested in Adelaide and left-arm spinner Jack Leach recalled to the XI. Chris Woakes and Stuart Broad make way.

Burns and Pope have endured a lean start to the series, which England trail 2-0 after thrashings in the first two Tests, with opener Burns making 51 runs at 12.75 and Pope 48 runs at 12 from number six.

The pair held their places when England kept faith with a flimsy top seven despite a poor showing in Brisbane, but a repeat performanc­e in the day/night Test at Adelaide has sent head coach Chris Silverwood and captain Joe Root scrambling for replacemen­ts.

Burns was clean bowled by the very first ball of the tour, but showed some signs of warming up to the series with a battling 34 in his last innings. With Crawley’s return hastened by some impressive showings in the nets, England may have considered dropping Burns’ opening partner Haseeb Hameed instead, but have backed the younger man.

The number 31 may have counted against Burns in three factors – it is his age, his number of caps and his rounded-up Test average. He is the only England player other than Root to hit a Test century in 2021, against New Zealand at Lord’s, but has also been dismissed for nought on six separate occasions and may have plateaued as an internatio­nal player.

Pope is a different matter. England remain convinced the 23year-old is the brightest prospect of his generation but his progress has stalled and, after 22 caps, his repeated struggles to build long innings have become an insurmount­able problem.

His average dipped below 30 in Adelaide and, while he is certain to be seen again, some rethinking of his methods may be required.

The cavalry’s statistics do not tell a hugely encouragin­g tale either.

Crawley lost his place after averaging a wince-inducing 11.14 in 2021, and Bairstow has a top score of 57 in 15 innings this year.

While that is concerning, England hope that Crawley’s height and tendency to play the ball late will prove well suited to conditions and that Bairstow’s experience can carry him through a return in front of 70,000 fans at the MCG.

He is on his third Ashes tour in Australia and scored a century in Perth four years ago.

Jos Buttler – who will retain the wicketkeep­ing gloves ahead of Bairstow – knows what is required to keep the Ashes alive.

‘We’re certainly not here to just take part and let 70,000 people enjoy another Australian victory,’ he said.

‘We have to fight back, we want to win the series and we want to win this Test match.

‘We’ll take that ‘backs against the wall’ attitude because that’s what we need to have.

‘I’m sure it will be a hostile environmen­t here but that’s to be embraced and enjoyed, everyone is excited to be here.

‘We know we need to bring our best cricket because we haven’t done that so far and that’s disappoint­ing. With the situation we’re in, we need to get there fast.

‘This is why you play the game, because you want to be part of big occasions. It isn’t always going to be

easy, but you need to turn up in tough situations and play well when it’s hard.’

Meanwhile, Scott Boland will become just the fourth Indigenous Australian to play Test cricket after winning a surprise debut.

Boland, 32, has been handed a dream call-up on his home pitch in Melbourne after the hosts decided not to risk the fitness of Jhye Richardson and Michael Neser.

Boland hails from the Gulidjan tribe in the Colac area of Victoria and his appearance comes 15 years after the retirement of the only previous Indigenous man to wear the Baggy Green, Jason Gillespie. Ashleigh Gardner played her second Test match earlier this year and was preceded by Faith Thomas in the women’s team as long ago as 1958.

Reflecting on the cultural significan­ce of Boland’s selection, Australian captain Pat Cummins said ‘It’s huge, Dizzy (Gillespie) was the first but Australia has a rich history, 50-60,000 years, and it’s great that is starting to be reflected in our team.

‘It’s a dream to wear the Baggy Green but a packed MCG, 70,000 in, Boxing Day... it doesn’t get any better.’

Richardson and Neser both performed well as Australia took a 2-0 series lead over England in Adelaide, but they have shown signs of fatigue with both sides continuing to rotate their pace options in a tightly-packed series.

‘Jhye and Nes are a little bit sore after Adelaide so we made the decision to bring in Scotty. It’s a luxury to have someone like him ready to go and he’s fresh and excited to get his chance,’ said Cummins.

‘We think he’s really well suited here and his record speaks for itself in domestic cricket.

‘It’s his home ground and having someone like him fresh, who can perform right away, were the big factors.’

‘WE ARE NOT HERE TO LET 70,000 AUSSIE PEOPLE ENJOY ANOTHER WIN’

 ?? ?? HIGH HOPES: Zak Crawley has been restored to England’s batting line-up following a shake-up
HIGH HOPES: Zak Crawley has been restored to England’s batting line-up following a shake-up

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