Key events
Zak Crawley and Joe Root have put together the sort of sensible partnership that England were lacking in their defeat in Perth. That may or may not be with a view to batting through the daylight hours and making the most of bowling under lights, or simply in response to a second-innings collapse that went a long way to costing the tourists the Ashes opener.
Simon Burnton has taken a deep dive into day-night Tests and why they loom as the future even as parts of the cricket fraternity – including Root – push back against their introduction to the five-day format, while also considering the impact of the pink ball.
But there is an inherent problem with a pink ball: around sunset the higher-frequency wavelengths of light become scattered and for a short time red light becomes dominant. This is why the sun, having appeared yellow all day, often looks orange or red as it sets. A number of academic studies have identified a change in the pink ball’s contrast polarity – the relationship between an object and its background – during this period. With all the red light around it becomes harder to see. The pink Kookaburra also swings more than their red version while new, so put a fresh one in the hands of a skilled seamer at the right time of day and havoc can ensue – particularly at the Gabba, where Brisbane’s humidity already helps swing bowlers.
Dinner: England 98-2
England recover from an all-too familiar horror start as Zak Crawley and Joe Root steer the tourists to 98 for two at dinner. Pink-ball specialist Mitchell Starc did the early damage under the blazing sun with a pair of wickets in his opening two overs as both Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope were dismissed for a duck. Crawley bounced back from his own pair of ducks in Perth to reach an unbeaten half-century while Root made the most of being given a second life when dropped off the third ball of his innings to reach the break on 32 not out. The England duo have put together the longest partnership so far in the series, while Australia have been unable to turn to a specialist spinner to try to break up the 93-run stand after leaving out Nathan Lyon for the first time in a Test on home soil for almost 14 years.
24th over: England 98-2 (Crawley 61, Root 32)
23rd over: England 94-2 (Crawley 57, Root 32) England survive another Mitchell Starc over as they shut up shop with the break now within reach. Crawley punishes the closest Starc comes to a loose delivery with a single off his pads.
22nd over: England 93-2 (Crawley 56, Root 32) BEATEN! Joe Root attempts to drive on the up but fails to pick up the late movement as he grins sheepishly at his own dose of good fortune. Zak Crawley punishes a looser delivery that drifts on to his pads with a clip to the fine leg boundary. The opener is playing within himself but ends the over with 56 runs from 72 balls, and England are within sight of reaching the first break only two wickets down.
21st over: England 86-2 (Crawley 50, Root 31) Zak Crawley reaches fifty for the 25th time in 110 Test innings as he answers the critics that came for him after a pair in Perth in the best possible way. The opener has only turned five of his half-centuries into a Test ton, but is looking more comfortable now that he has found a balance between defence and attack.
20th over: England 84-2 (Crawley 49, Root 30) Cameron Green is thrown the ball for the first time today with Australia increasingly desperate for a breakthrough. It makes sense to mix and match the bowlers, and prevent the batters from getting into too much of a rhythm, with five pacers in the lineup – and no Nathan Lyon! Crawley smacks Green down the ground and Doggett makes a meal of the dive in front of the rope as he carries the ball into the boundary.
Martin Burley in New Zealand has found a creative solution to what he dubs the “Crawley Paradox”.
“After Crawley gets a double century to win this Test, we should pocket our winnings and drop him before the inevitable string of single-figure innings that he’ll have in the rest of the series. However, if he loses his wicket soon, the smarter move would be to keep him in knowing that the one decent score he gets per series is still to come. Therefore, the better he does this Test the more justification for dropping him.”
OK, am I the only one whose head hurts?
19th over: England 78-2 (Crawley 44, Root 29) Mitchell Starc returns for a second spell. He has already drawn level with Pakistan great Wasim Akram for the most Test wickets for a left-armer, but is unable to edge to the top of the list as Root drives for a single, and Crawley adds another through square leg.
Cricket Australia has named the Australia A squad for the four-day match against England Lions at Allan Border Field from tomorrow – and Sam Konstas is the notable absentee. Beau Webster will get some game time after missing out on the opening two Ashes Tests, while Matt Renshaw, Jhye Richardson and Josh Philippe have been recalled. Nathan McSweeney will captain Australia A side for this fixture.
Australia A squad: Nathan McSweeney (capt), Beau Webster, Campbell Kellaway, Cooper Connolly, Fergus O’Neill, Jhye Richardson, Josh Philippe, Matt Renshaw, Ryan Hadley, Todd Murphy, Xavier Bartlett.
18th over: England 76-2 (Crawley 43, Root 28) DROPPED! Crawley goes straight down the ground and lifts another drive in the air. But Boland is unable to settle his hands in time to claim a tricky catch. They’re always tough when the ball goes back to a fast bowler, but Boland all but had two hands to that one. Both batters have now been put down off tough chances as the unbroken partnership grows to 71 runs.
17th over: England 71-2 (Crawley 39, Root 27) Doggett has found an awkward line and length as Root is happy to leave anything he isn’t forced to play at. But when the second-Test bowler drifts onto his pads, Root takes an easy single to fine leg.
16th over: England 70-2 (Crawley 39, Root 26) Root let fly with a cracking straight drive back over Boland’s head and to the rope. The Australia quick ends the over bowling at a nagging length as Crawley almost dabbles at a straight ball outside fifth-stump before pulling out at the last second.
Brian Withington joins the discussion over the value – or otherwise – of Zak Crawley.
“Did Steve Hudson forget to include ‘stupidly magnificent’ in his list of Crawley epitaphs? It’s certainly not dull, and I’d forgive him a patchy career average for one or two match-defining innings this winter (and not of the Perth variety).”
15th over: England 65-2 (Crawley 39, Root 21) Doggett gets the ball to jag back into Root and the appeal goes up for lbw. There has been plenty of bounce at the Gabba and that was sailing over off-stump. Doggett saves a couple with some sharp fielding off a straight drive. Root clips a single off his pads to end the over.
14th over: England 64-2 (Crawley 39, Root 20) Zak Crawley reaches wide and flashes at a wider ball outside off-stump. Most batters would leave that while England are comfortably rebuilding their innings, but that is the way that Crawley likes to play. Just one wide – which wasn’t any further away from Crawley than the one he swings at – from the Boland over.
13th over: England 63-2 (Crawley 39, Root 20) Brendan Doggett continues for Australia as he nudges 135km/h. Joe Root picks up the pace quickly and guides a straight ball through cover for three runs.
Zak Crawley divides opinion about as much as any current-day cricketer. The England opener has been near his best today at the Gabba as he settles into an innings and gets his cover drive flowing. But an average of barely more than 30 across 60 Tests is hard to ignore. Steve Hudson is prepared to sit back and enjoy Crawley for what he is.
“It sounds like Crawley hasn’t compromised his approach despite all the criticism England have had after the first Test. I can’t decide whether this is magnificent, or stupid, or magnificently stupid. We shall see.”
Mitchell Starc has done the damage for Australia with two wickets in his first over-and-a-half, and heads to the drinks break with figures of two for 21 from five overs. The left-armer is at the peak of his powers at the age of 35 – a number not lost on Will Ellen.
“In a probably futile effort to step above the fray, isn’t there something admirable about modern day sports science? The way it allows us to admire sportsmen and women late into their 30s? In the recent past, a fast bowler of 32 would be just about ready for the proverbial glue factory. But at nearly 36, Mitchell Starc is at the absolute peak of his career. He’s never bowled better.”
12th over: England 58-2 (Crawley 37, Root 17) Joe Root does well to dig out a yorker from Scott Boland – it seemed to take the batter by surprise. The England No 4 finishes the over with a textbook off-drive to the boundary. That might be the shot of the day so far and brings up the 50-run partnership before the players take a break for drinks. An entertaining first hour was almost worth the 12-day wait between Tests.
11th over: England 51-2 (Crawley 36, Root 11) Brendan Doggett takes the pink ball and the England batters will be relieved to see the back of Mitchell Starc for now. The left-armer heads to the rooms for a breather. Root picks up an easy three with a controlled cut shot, and Crawley finds the same with another well-timed drive.
10th over: England 45-2 (Crawley 33, Root 8) Australia rise as one in the hope that Zak Crawley has nicked a loose pull shot on the way through to the keeper. The ball is high and wide of offstump as it flicks the pad on the way past and Steve Smith has no interest in a review. Boland is testing the England pair but their blossoming partnership is now out to 40 runs.
England have done well to recover from another horror start at the hands of Mitchell Starc. Tom Nolan insists he is “keeping the faith for now” as he adds …
“Reluctant to email at all given that my opinions could be out of date by the time I have finished each sentence. Even so, trying to remain positive despite the two quick wickets. Not unusual that with the pink ball.
“If England can see off the new ball, they should (!!) be able to crack on and score some runs before it gets dark and floodlights come in.”
9th over: England 43-2 (Crawley 32, Root 7) Mitchell Starc continues into his fifth over as Steve Smith relies on the left-armer to continue testing the England top order just as he did in Perth. Crawley drives in the air yet again but this time picks a gap at extra cover for two runs. The opener wafts wildly at a shorter ball but it somehow misses everything and clears keeper Carey for four byes. Crawley then dispatches a fuller ball straight down the ground and is fortunate that Starc can’t get his left mit around it. Australia won’t mind giving up a few runs as the half-chances keep coming from Crawley.
8th over: England 32-2 (Crawley 25, Root 7) Scott Boland replaces Michael Neser and soon finds movement back into Joe Root. Boland has a strong record against the England No 4 – as well as Crawley – but this time Root clips off his pads for an easy single. Crawley ends the over doing much the same.
7th over: England 30-2 (Crawley 24, Root 6) Crawley will never die wondering and a flash outside offstump clears the infield and lands safely for two runs. The opener is fortunate when a yorker holds its line and lands wide of offstump as Crawley plays and misses.
6th over: England 28-2 (Crawley 22, Root 6) Crawley works Neser off his pads for a couple of runs at midwicket and drives wide of mid-on for three more. The opener is looking comfortable playing to the offside as he settles in.
5th over: England 23-2 (Crawley 17, Root 6) A relatively tame over from Starc as Crawley picks up an early single with a punch to mid-off, and Root looks to leave anything he isn’t forced to play at. A trademark inswinging yorker from Starc draws Root into his forward defence but the former skipper survives.
4th over: England 22-2 (Crawley 16, Root 6) Michael Neser holds his line and draws an edge from Zak Crawley. The ball bounces off the batter and drops well short of the slips cordon that have been busy with both Starc and Neser getting early movement. Then Steve Smith doesn’t act on a half-hearted appeal for caught behind. Neser was by far the most interested, and replays show he has good reason to be with a very faint spike. Among all that, Crawley crunches a couple of boundaries and adds two runs to backward point.
3rd over: England 11-2 (Crawley 5, Root 6) Mitchell Starc has two in as many overs and it very nearly is three with England all at sea. Joe Root is in and facing the pink ball within three overs and could hardly be more fortunate as a heavy nick just falls short of a diving Steve Smith in the slips cordon and races away for four runs. England, of course, won the toss and elected to bat with the idea that this is the better time to be at the crease.
WICKET! Pope b Starc 0 (England 5-2)
Mitchell Starc strikes again! Olllie Pope can’t resist swinging at a wider ball that pitches back of a length and chops on to his stumps. A three-ball duck for Pope and England are already on the ropes.
2nd over: England 5-1 (Crawley 5, Pope 0) Michael Neser takes the new ball in his first Test for a few days short of three years. The right-armer is straight on the money bowling at a tick over 130km/h as Crawley leaves three deliveries then is forced to defend the next couple. A play and a miss at the final ball is fortunate to clear the bat.
1st over: England 5-1 (Crawley 5, Pope 0) Mitchell Starc’s incredible streak of taking a wicket in the opening over of an innings continues as the left-armer draws Ben Duckett into reaching for the ball. Zak Crawley does well to survive three deliveries then gets his first runs of the series as a cover drive races away to the boundary. The England opener digs out an inswinging yorker with a jab – and a single – to midwicket, but Duckett is already on his way.
WICKET! Duckett c Labuschagne b Starc 0 (England 5-1)
Mitchell Starc. First over. Wicket. Perfect start for Australia. It feels like we’ve been here before. Ben Duckett lunges forward, gets a nick and is caught at first slip for a golden duck.
Crawley shoulders arms at the first ball – and survives. But George Thomson is far from convinced the England opener will be around for much longer in Brisbane.
“Stand aside Graeme Hick, Greg Blewett, Mark Ramprakash, Mohammad Ashraful. Today, Zak Crawley indisputably becomes the most selector-indulged Test batter in history.”
Zak Crawley marks out his place after copping a pair in Perth when dismissed by Mitchell Starc in the first over of each innings. Ben Duckett stands at the non-striker’s end for England as the second Test begins at the Gabba. Here we go …
Australia would have preferred to bat first and ideally manage the game so that Mitchell Starc might run wild under lights. The left-armer stands apart in pink-ball Tests with 81 wickets at a click of 17, but will take the ball under the blazing sun on day one of the second Ashes Test.
James Wallace finds out – from batters who have dared to stare down Starc from 22 years – what makes him such a menace with the pink ball.
Weather
The sun is belting down in Brisbane with a touch of cloud around as the mercury hits the expected high of 27C.
The players are standing around the boundary getting ready to begin the formalities at the Gabba that will include a minutes silence for the late Robin Smith.
Daniel Pollard has been in touch with his memories of “the Judge”.
“As a 45-year-old cricket lover my first proper technicolor memories of English cricket were the unforgiving 90s when we seemed almost always under the cosh. Certain players walking to the crease just somehow gave you the feeling that things might, just might, be OK. Thorpey was of course one. Robin Smith was another.
“Arms like cannons in the days that pounding weights in the gym wasn’t de rigueur. No grill covering his face – he didn’t fear getting pelted with 90mph missiles ball after ball after ball. But moreover you just felt here was a guy who was up for the fight. RIP Judge. Say hi to Warnie for us. I expect the upstairs nets are pretty busy this week.”
England have been happy to chase during Ben Stokes’ reign but elected to bat – and perhaps control the flow of the game – in the day-night Test at the Gabba. The tourists’ captain explains the decision and how England can bounce back from their demoralising defeat in the Ashes opener.
We come here off the back of a disappointing week last week. So hopefully we can find those runs.
You look at how things play out with the different conditions, give yourself a better chance to know that you are going to bat in the, sort of, easier conditions.
Not too sure how the wicket is going to play. We have got an opportunity to put runs on the board. It’s certainly the biggest week of my captaincy up until now but we’ve had a good week and we’re raring to go.
Steve Smith was the one to drop the selection bombshell and it wasn’t the one we expected with Pat Cummins increasingly likely to miss out as the players arrived at the Gabba, but the decision to leave out off-spinner Nathan Lyon. The stand-in skipper explains both calls …
Pat was close. He’s done everything right. We thought it might be a bit risky for this game but he’s tracking well for the next one (in Adelaide). Josh Inglis will bat in the middle, Head will open.
Michael Neser is in for Nathan Lyon with the pink ball. We think it’s going to offer quite a bit, particularly later on under lights. We play in the night a lot and thought that was going to be the best attack to take 20 wickets.
England XI
England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (capt), Jamie Smith (wk), Will Jacks, Brydon Carse, Gus Atkinson, Jofra Archer.
No tomfoolery from England as Will Jacks is picked for his third Test and replaces Mark Wood in the XI that played in the defeat in Perth. The 27-year-old bolsters the tourists’ batting which runs even deeper with him in the side, though he has been picked in Brisbane just as much for his off-spin. A six-for on debut in Pakistan in 2022 suggests Jacks’ bowling will be useful if and when the pink ball softens at the Gabba, though he has only bowled another 14 overs across three Test innings since then.
All eyes will be on Jofra Archer, especially with Wood now absent, when England take their turn to bowl in Brisbane. But, for now, they will hope to bat much longer than the 30-odd overs that they managed in both innings in Perth.
Australia XI
Australia: Jake Weatherald, Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith (capt), Cameron Green, Josh Inglis, Alex Carey (wk), Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Scott Boland, Brendan Doggett.
The speculation comes to a close but the debate will continue across the afternoon at least, as Australia turn to a horses for course approach with Nathan Lyon left out of a home Test for the first time in almost 14 years. The off-spinner was also omitted from the XI in Australia’s most recent pink-ball Test in the Caribbean, but it still feels like a huge call to leave out a bowler who has claimed 562 wickets. Michael Neser comes in to add more pace in the day-night Test, as well as reducing the length of the Australia tail.
As expected, Josh Inglis replaces Usman Khawaja in the lineup for his fourth Test – though the 30-year-old will bat in the middle order with Travis Head hard to move out of the opening slot.
Toss: England win the toss and elect to bat
Ben Stokes calls correctly and England will bat first in the second Ashes Test at the Gabba. Steve Smith would have preferred to bat first as well.
Steve Smith joins Ben Stokes at the toss as Australia captain Pat Cummins remains on ice to continue his recovery from a back stress issue.
England and Australia will wear black armbands on day one of the second Test in memory of former England and Hampshire batter Robin Smith, who passed away earlier this week. There will also be a moments silence before the national anthems.
Tanya Aldred has written a beautiful tribute to Robin Smith, who stood tall when England cricket was at a low point through the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Smith’s cut, alongside a David Gower cover drive, gave hope where there was little left in the bucket. Those famous forearms – half oak, half baobab – the white shirt unbuttoned past the clavicle, the chain glinting through his chest hair, smelt enticingly like bravery, and old spice and one last throw of the dice.
The sight of Smith marching out to bat – as an opener (in four Tests), No 3 (six), No 4 (30), No 5 (19), No 6 (14) or No 7 (twice) – those charmingly indecisive selectors never could quite place him – was a high point in a largely post-Botham era, a clear-the-bars alarm for those in the ground and a stay‑your‑ground sign to those on the sofa.
Our selection dilemma detectives are casting their eye over Australia’s preparations in Brisbane. Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon have been seen getting around in flat shoes, while Michael Neser and Brendan Doggett are both wearing spikes and have marked out their run up.
Ali Martin is at the Gabba and points out that this would be the first time Australia enter a home Test without Lyon since facing India at the Waca in early 2012. Meanwhile, Travis Head has confirmed on Fox Sports that he will open the innings whether Australia bat first or second.
Usman Khawaja is already certain to miss the second Test for Australia after being unable to open while suffering back spasms in Perth. That of course opened the door for Travis Head to take the game away from England with a blistering century and the expectation is that the powerhouse will bat at the top of the order again in Brisbane. What time means for Khawaja – who turns 39 this month – could well be decided in the middle over the next two (please, no) to five days. Geoff Lemon has been busy pondering what it all means for the veteran and the future of this Australia outfit.
Right now Australia are saying Khawaja is still in the plan, staying with the squad in Brisbane for his treatment. If he can storm back to have a decisive influence in the final three Tests, it would be a wonderful story to round out a career that has already given us several. But there’s a point at which Khawaja becomes Homer Simpson’s giant sandwich, and the team clinging on for too long faces a health hazard.
Currently, nobody else knows what they are doing because the injured opener is the variable. Head doesn’t know if he has that job for a season or a week. Inglis won’t know if he’s coming in with licence to attack the series over four Tests, or needing a huge score from one. The argument for keeping Khawaja around since David Warner’s retirement has been stability, but right now he is the main destabilising influence on this team.
We might have to wait to find out the Australia XI until either Pat Cummins or Steve Smith walk on to the Gabba alongside England captain Ben Stokes for the toss. But Geoff Lemon has already dived into what that call will mean for the hosts and the second Test.
Cummins, it seems, is now feeling good enough in training that waiting for the third Test in Adelaide seems excessive. But overnight nerves might get the better of anyone in the decision-making chain, pondering the fallout that would await them if that comeback turned out to be too soon. That leaves a nation of Australians in the highly unusual position of going to sleep the night before a Test match without knowing who will captain the team the next day. The stand-in, Steve Smith, took the press conference as though he would do the job, but declined to confirm that this would be the case.
If Cummins returns, the cards in the dealer’s hands could be whisked in various ways around the table. Perhaps in order to mitigate the number of overs required of him, he could be part of a four-man pace attack and replace Nathan Lyon. That might also mean bringing Beau Webster into the middle order, given he could offer spin. If Cummins plays alongside Lyon, instead replacing Brendan Doggett as one of three quicks, Webster could still be included to bowl backup seam alongside Cameron Green.
The plot thickens at the Gabba with one of Australia’s heroes of the first Test, Travis Head, heading into the middle for a sighter of the pitch with pads on and bat in hand.
I promised the conjecture would continue and especially over whether Pat Cummins would be injected into the Australia XI after impressing in the nets in Brisbane. But if being left out of the squad was the first sign that the fast bowler would have to wait a little longer before playing a part in this Ashes series, Steve Smith inspecting the pitch alongside coach Andrew McDonald – rather than the formal Test captain – could be the strongest pointer yet.
Cummins arrived earlier at the Gabba wearing a polo shirt, while the other Australia players are decked out in their training shirts. This could be elite attention to detail from Australia, but feels more likely to be the end of the fun n games.
Preamble
Martin Pegan
We’re back! After a two-day taster of the most highly anticipated Ashes on Australian soil for years, if not decades, was followed by 12 days of fresh dissection, discussion and debate, the second Test finally begins in Brisbane this afternoon. Welcome to day one of the second Test of the 2025-26 Ashes.
The conjecture continues with Australia yet to name their XI for the pink-ball Test at the Gabba. Captain Pat Cummins is in line for a late call-up after being left out of the squad as he recovers from a back injury, while Josh Inglis is widely expected to slide into the middle order and allow Travis Head to reprise his rollicking role as opener in the absence of Usman Khawaja. All will be revealed at the toss, stand-in skipper Steve Smith promised yesterday, as the Australia outfit unusually plays their cards close to their chest.
There are fewer surprises in the England camp as Will Jacks has already been picked in the XI. The batting all-rounder replaces Mark Wood in the side that collapsed to defeat in the Ashes opener, as the speed demon is forced out – as a precaution, we are told – due to soreness in the left knee that he happened to have surgery on earlier this year. But whether the tourists double down and roll out the same captivating yet chaotic strategy remains to be seen. It lifted England to a promising position in Perth before their own blunders with the bat and Head’s heroics loosened their grip on the first Test in a matter of hours and they quickly fell behind 1-0 in the series.
More chaos can be expected in Brisbane in the next few days – and hopefully longer – as the city again hosts a day-night Test. Australia are vastly more experienced in the varied conditions and tactics that come with the pink ball being delivered across the afternoon, dusk and early evening, and have won 13 of the 14 day-night Tests they have played. But the one blemish on that record came the last time they played with the pink ball at the Gabba, when West Indies stunned the hosts under lights in January 2024. The Gabbatoir is not quite the fortress that it once was for Australia, but they have not lost to their oldest rivals at the venue since 1986.
This iteration of England under captain Ben Stokes seeks to separate themselves from those that came before but have even more history to rewrite than they might like in Brisbane. They have lost five of their seven day-night Tests, and last played with the pink ball in February 2023, though that at least ended with a victory over New Zealand at Mount Maunganui. Of more concern might be the threat of falling 2-0 behind, knowing that only one side – under the guidance of a certain Don Bradman in 1936-37 – has overturned such a deficit to win an Ashes series.
There is still an hour to go before the toss and confirmed teams – with first ball to be bowled at 2pm in Brisbane / 3pm AEDT / 4am GMT. Plenty of time to get in touch with your thoughts and predictions for the second Test and perhaps beyond – drop me an email or find me @martinpegan on Bluesky or X.
In the meantime, I’ll help you catch up on all that has happened during the frankly painstaking 12-day fallow period between Tests, and in the lead up to the day-nighter at the Gabba. Let’s get into it …