Key Points

England's fast-bowling lineup remains uncertain ahead of the Ashes, with injuries clouding Woakes and Archer's availability. Joe Root aims to finally score a Test century in Australia, a missing milestone in his legendary career. Spin options are up for debate, with young Bashir and experienced Leach in contention. Opener Zak Crawley must improve his poor record Down Under to give England a strong start.

Key Points: England's Key Ashes Questions Before Australia Test Series

  • England's pace attack remains unsettled with Woakes and Archer's fitness uncertain
  • Joe Root seeks first Test century on Australian soil
  • Spin options unclear with Bashir, Leach, and Ahmed in contention
  • Zak Crawley faces pressure to improve his poor Australia record
3 min read

Questions England must address ahead of Ashes in Australia

England must resolve pace attack, Root's form, and spin options to challenge Australia in the Ashes and boost WTC Final hopes.

"If Root can break his century duck in Australia, it will be one of his biggest achievements – ICC"

London, August 5

England need to seek answers ahead of the five-match Ashes series in Australia later this year. If they harbour aspirations of reaching the ICC World Test Championship (WTC) Final for the first time, then a positive result Down Under is crucial, as per the official website of the ICC.

England showed plenty of good signs during their recent series with India, but still have some unanswered questions as they attempt to win back the Ashes from Australia for the first time since the start of 2018.

England tried as many as six different fast bowlers across the five-match series against India, but they aren't all that much clearer about what their best pace line-up looks like.

Whether Chris Woakes recovers from his shoulder ailment in time for the Ashes remains to be seen, while the ongoing fitness concerns for pace spearhead Jofra Archer are also sure to be monitored before the trip Down Under.

England will also be hoping that Mark Wood will be fit to make the trip to Australia as his pace will surely be an asset, with the likes of Josh Tongue, Brydon Carse, and Gus Atkinson all in consideration for selection too.While there is no doubting the class of Joe Root, the England veteran is yet to register a Test century on Australian shores, and this is probably the only thing missing from his bulky resume as he tries to hunt down Sachin Tendulkar's record for the most hundreds in Test cricket.

If Root can break his century duck this time in Australia and lead England to an Ashes victory, then it will surely go down as one of the right-hander's biggest achievements during his illustrious international career.

Youngster Shoaib Bashir appears to be the front-runner to be England's first-choice spin option during the Ashes, providing he recovers from his finger injury, but the 20-year-old is yet to set the world on fire and may be targeted by Australia's batting group.

England could turn to the experience of Jack Leach or provide Liam Dawson another opportunity after he got a taste of it against India, or will Rehan Ahmed make a surprise return and be included in the touring party?

Crawley was England's leading run-scorer during the most recent Ashes series in 2023, but the tall opener was somewhat disappointing on his inaugural visit to Australia when he managed just 166 runs from three Tests across the 2021/2022 series.

Australia's experienced pace attack will fancy their chances against Crawley and the right-hander will be under pressure to perform well and get the side off to a good start alongside fellow opener Ben Duckett.

Jamie Smith has made a superb start to his fledgling international Test career, and the comparisons with Australian great Adam Gilchrist seem somewhat justified, given his Test batting average currently sits close to 50.

It will be a step up in class for Smith taking on Australia away from home and the Aussies are sure to try and intimidate the talented 25-year-old in his first tour Down Under.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Root not having a century in Australia is surprising! Hope he breaks that jinx this time. But honestly, as an Indian, I'm more interested in watching how our boys perform in England later this year 😉
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Arjun K
England's biggest problem is their openers. Crawley and Duckett don't inspire confidence against Starc and Cummins on bouncy tracks. They should take lessons from how Rohit and Gill played in Australia last tour!
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Sarah B
As someone who's lived in both India and England, I think England are overestimating their chances. Australia at home is a different beast altogether. Their batting looks fragile against quality pace - we saw that against Bumrah & co.
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Vikram M
Why is everyone ignoring the spin factor? Australia has good players of spin now. If England play two spinners like they did in India, it might backfire badly. Ashwin-Jadeja combo worked for us, but England don't have that quality.
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Kavya N
Honestly, England should focus on developing their own players instead of comparing Smith to Gilchrist. We Indians know the pressure of such comparisons - remember all the 'next Tendulkar' tags? Let the boy play his natural game!
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Michael C

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