Kevin Pietersen Slams England's "Tough To Understand" Ashes Defeat In Adelaide

Former England cricketer Kevin Pietersen has criticised the national team's performance following an 82-run loss to Australia in the third Ashes Test at Adelaide Oval. The defeat gives Australia an unassailable 3-0 lead in the five-match series, ensuring they retain the Ashes. Wicketkeeper-batter Alex Carey was awarded Player of the Match for his knocks of 106 and 72.

Key Points: Kevin Pietersen Criticises England After Adelaide Loss, Australia Retain Ashes

  • Kevin Pietersen criticises England's mindset
  • Australia retains Ashes with 3-0 lead
  • Alex Carey's century earns Player of the Match
  • England's batting collapses during 435-run chase
  • Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon lead Australian bowling attack
  • Defeat extends England's winless streak in Australia since 2010/11
4 min read

Kevin Pietersen criticises England after their Ashes loss in Adelaide

Former England star Kevin Pietersen questions team's mindset after 82-run defeat in 3rd Test, as Australia takes unassailable 3-0 series lead to retain the Ashes.

"No Hazlewood, hardly any Cummins, Smith, Lyon, etc, makes this defeat tough to understand. - Kevin Pietersen / Former England CricketerSeen more dismissals this morning that tell me all I need to know about an earlier tweet I wrote, saying that batters are not tuned into Test Cricket anymore. - Kevin Pietersen / Former England Cricketer"

Adelaide, December 21

Former England cricketer Kevin Pietersen has criticised the Ben Stokes-led side after their 82-run loss in the third Test at Adelaide Oval on Sunday, and Australia retaining the Ashes after taking an unbeaten 3-0 lead in the ongoing five-match Test series.

Pietersen took on to his X handle, and said that this defeat is tough to understand because Australia were without Josh Hazlewood and Steve Smith. "No Hazlewood, hardly any Cummins, Smith, Lyon, etc, makes this defeat tough to understand."

"Seen more dismissals this morning that tell me all I need to know about an earlier tweet I wrote, saying that batters are not tuned into Test Cricket anymore," Pietersen wrote.

Coming to the match, Australia won the toss and opted to bat first. But the relentless pace of Jofra Archer and Brydon Carse put them in a soup at 94/4 in their first innings.

It was Usman Khawaja's veteran instincts and signature cuts and sweeps during his 126-ball 82, consisting of 10 fours, which slowly brought back the momentum to the Aussies, with Alex Carey also firing at the other end.

Carey brought up his maiden Ashes ton, scoring 106 in 143 balls, with eight fours and a six. A half-century run stand between Mitchell Starc (54 in 75 balls, with eight fours) and Scott Boland (14*) troubled England just when they wanted to bundle Aussies for below 300.

Aussies scored 371 in 91.2 overs. Archer (5/53) delivered a brilliant fifer for England, with Josh Tongue and Will Jacks getting a couple each.

Later, Nathan Lyon (2/70) and skipper Pat Cummins (3/70) kept England away from forming big partnerships, reducing them to 168/8 by getting wickets just when England looked to find an escape.

However, a century stand between skipper Ben Stokes (83 in 198 balls, with eight fours) and a resolute Archer (51 in 105 balls, with five fours and a six) powered England to 286, with their trail at 85 runs.

Boland played a significant role in wiping out the tail-end with three wickets.In their second innings, England had the upper hand over Australia at one point, with Australia at 149/4. However, hometown heroes Travis Head (170 in 219 balls, with 16 fours and two sixes) and Carey (72 in 128 balls, with six fours) revelled amid loud cheers from the crowd, outbattling England one delivery at a time.

While England was better with the ball on day four and wiped them out for 349 runs, a record run-chase of 435 runs awaited England. Tongue (4/80) and Carse (3/80) were amongst the top bowlers for England.

After a first-ball boundary in their run chase, England's Ben Duckett (4) lost his wicket and Ollie Pope (17) also continued to find slip fielders as England were reduced to 31/2. Joe Root (39 in 63 balls, with five fours) and Harry Brook put on a 78-run stand, giving their team some normalcy.

Root continued to be a "nicking machine", falling to Cummins for the second time in the match and for the 13th time overall in Tests.

Crawley, who looked uncharacteristically patient, carried England's hopes forward with Brook until a brain-fade reverse sweep from Brook ended his stay at 56 balls and triggered a mini-collapse from 177/3 to 194/6.

Jamie Smith (60 in 83 balls, with seven fours) and Will Jacks put on a 91-run stand, making England fans believe and dare to dream until the adrenaline of counter-attacking Starc got the best of Jamie.

Jacks (47 in 137 balls, with three fours) put on a half-century stand with Carse (39* in 64 balls, with four boundaries and a six) to keep England's heart beating, but after Jacks was gone, there was no coming back as Australia bundled out England for 352 runs.

Cummins (3/48), Starc (3/62) and Lyon (3/77) shone with the ball, denying England another shot at an Ashes series win in Australia since 2010/11 and keeping them winless in Aussie land since that glorious moment. Australia took an unassailable 3-0 lead, and Carey was given the 'Player of the Match' honours for his knocks of 106 and 72.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in India, I watched this match late into the night. It's painful to see such talent in the England squad not translating into results. Archer's all-round effort was brilliant, but one man can't win a Test match. Australia's bench strength is scary good.
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Ananya R
Honestly, I feel for Ben Stokes. He fought so hard with that 83. But the middle order just keeps letting him down. Brook's reverse sweep when they were building a partnership? That's the lack of game sense Pietersen is talking about. Test cricket demands respect. 🤦‍♀️
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Vikram M
While the criticism is valid, let's not forget Australia played superb cricket. Travis Head's innings was a masterclass under pressure. Sometimes you just have to tip your hat to the opposition. England lost to a better team on the day, plain and simple.
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Michael C
The real story is Australia winning without some of their key players. It shows the system they have. In India, we've seen how important domestic structure is. England might need to look at their County cricket to build players with more temperament for the long game.
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Priya S
So many soft dismissals! Root nicking again, Brook's rash shot... It's frustrating to watch as a neutral fan. I stayed up hoping for a close contest. England had their chances, especially when Aus were 149/4 in the 2nd innings. They just couldn't land the knockout punch.

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