Ashes Pressure: How This Series Will Define England's Bazball Legacy

Nasser Hussain believes the upcoming Ashes series will be the defining moment for England's Bazball approach. He notes that Australia are clear favorites given England's poor record there. The former captain sees this as the culmination of three years of planning specifically for Australian conditions. Hussain respects how the current leadership has developed their philosophy regardless of outside opinions.

Key Points: Nasser Hussain Says Ashes Will Define England's Bazball Approach

  • Australia are firm favorites with England's poor record down under
  • England haven't won an Ashes in Australia since the 2010-11 series
  • Series outcome will validate or question Bazball's effectiveness
  • This Ashes represents culmination of three years of planning
3 min read

Ashes usually defines England captains and coaches: Nasser Hussain

Former England captain Nasser Hussain believes the upcoming Ashes series will be the ultimate test for Bazball and could define the legacies of Stokes and McCullum.

"This series usually defines England captains and coaches, and this one will - Nasser Hussain"

New Delhi, Nov 17

Former England captain Nasser Hussain commented on the upcoming Ashes series, describing it as a critical moment for ‘Bazball,’ the highly aggressive style embraced by this team, which aims to dominate opponents by scoring runs rapidly.

He also believes that the series will define the Bazball approach of the team, besides the captain and coaches.

“England say it won’t but it will. This series usually defines England captains and coaches, and this one will,” Hussain told The Athletic when asked if the Ashes will define the team’s approach.

"You’ve got to add context. Australia are firm favourites. England have not won a single one of their last 15 Tests in Australia. That’s hard, cold facts. Fifteen Tests, drawn two, lost 13. It shows how hard it is to go to Australia and win.

"So if they win it down there for the first time since 2010-11 — and before then, you have to go back to Mike Gatting in 1986-87 — of course it will define this team. Our record in Australia has been abysmal.

"If England win the Ashes (managing director) Rob Key, Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum will say: ‘There you are, we told you so’. But if they lose it, it will be others saying, ‘Same old story," he added.

Hussain evolved from a rebellious figure in English cricket to one of the most important captains, helping England rise from being the lowest-ranked Test team in 1999. After rebuilding their respect, confidence, and professionalism with coach Duncan Fletcher, he passed the captaincy to Michael Vaughan, who then led England to their historic Ashes victory in 2005.

He was brutally honest in sharing his opinion, stating that England’s major game plan over the past few years has centred on how to beat the Aussies in Australia.

“This is going to be a special series because it does feel like the culmination for this regime. Not the end, but this is what they’ve built up to. They came in not long after an Ashes drubbing and the whole game plan for the last three and a half years has been about how to win in Australia. Rightly or wrongly,” he mentioned.

Hussain might have taken a different approach during his time at the helm, but he greatly respects how captain Stokes, coach McCullum, and Key have developed the philosophy and culture within this England team.

“The thing I really like about it is that they are not overly concerned about what other people think. They don’t worry about the reaction. I like that. I like the attitude of, ‘This is how we’re doing it, and we’ll live or die by it.’ I am a fan of the way England play. I can see why they hate it being called Bazball because that makes it sound like it’s the only way they play. It has been refined over time,” he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Hussain makes valid points. England's record in Australia is really poor - 15 Tests without a win! Bazball might work in England but Australian pitches and bowling attack will test this approach severely. Hope it's an exciting series! 🏏
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Sarah B
Respectfully, I think Bazball is overhyped. Test cricket requires patience and adapting to conditions. England's all-out aggression might backfire against Australia's quality pace attack. Sometimes traditional methods work better than revolutionary approaches.
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Arjun K
The Ashes always delivers drama! As an Indian, I love watching this rivalry. Stokes and McCullum have changed England's mindset completely. Win or lose, they're making Test cricket exciting again. Can't wait for the series! 🔥
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Michael C
Interesting perspective from Hussain. He's right that this series will define the Bazball era. If England can win in Australia with this approach, it could change Test cricket forever. But if they fail, critics will have a field day.
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Kavya N
As a cricket enthusiast from Mumbai, I appreciate how Hussain acknowledges England's poor record in Australia. It's similar to how teams struggle in Indian conditions. Home advantage in cricket is massive! Hope the series lives up to the hype 🤞

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