Test Match Special - Stokes speaks to TMS as Cummins could return

Episode Date: December 3, 2025

Eleanor Oldroyd is alongside Jonathan Agnew and ABC’s Corbin Middlemas to look ahead to the second Ashes Test at the Gabba. They discuss England’s preparation on the eve of the day-night Test matc...h, as well as the boost Australia could get by bringing back their captain Pat Cummins.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. To embrace the impossible requires a vehicle that pushes what's possible. Defender 110 boasts a towing capacity of 3,500 kilograms, a weighting depth of 900 millimetres and a roof load up to 300 kilograms. Learn more at landrover.ca. You're listening to the TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live. Hello, I'm Eleanor Aldroyd and welcome to the TMS podcast from The Gabba on the eve of the second Ashes test, the daynight at this iconic ground. To come, we'll be talking to England skipper Ben Stokes and chatting with Jonathan Agnew and the ABC's Corbyn Middleness as England make their final preparations for the test, which starts at 4am GMT on Thursday.
Starting point is 00:00:52 You're listening to the TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live. So it's hello to Agas, hello to Corbyn. Corbyn, welcome to TMS. Welcome to the pod. Thank you for having me. Well, it's lovely to be here in Brisbane together. And we look out over this ground. So as the eve of the test match, you can see the pops of yellow with the maroon and the blue seats in this extraordinary multi-coloured bowl with a blue sky above and the sun is just setting as we're sitting here.
Starting point is 00:01:21 And Agers, it looks peaceful. It looks tranquil. Come two o'clock tomorrow afternoon. It's not going to be either of them. It's a brutal place, this is. And you say, I was just looking at my watch, as you said, the sunny setting, which it is. That's Costa 6. There's a lot of play left, and it goes dark pretty quickly in this part of the world.
Starting point is 00:01:38 So there is going to be that long, that sort of twilighty, dark time that makes day-night cricket actually quite interesting. I know people, a lot of people aren't necessarily fans of it. But it does mean that more people can actually get to watch a game of cricket on the telly when they get back home after work. Kids, hopefully, can get involved in it. It just depends on where you play it. And you play it somewhere like Brisbane. or Adelaide or somewhere nice and warm and it's lovely it's not so nice to try and play it at Birmingham
Starting point is 00:02:02 but it makes it a very interesting game but this is a much changed ground from how it used to be and it'll be changing soon won't it? It's going to be that's it the Gabba is going to go and they're going to have a new all-purpose stadium so I don't know if we'll see test cricket at the Gabber again to be honest but it's a bad memories
Starting point is 00:02:20 they can bury all the memories of this place I mean yeah you'd have thought NASA Hussein will have bad memories Steve Harmison you think of science Simon Jones, Rory Burns, you can start listing the claim. Almost where Simon Jones went down, just looking down on it now. That's virtually, running towards the boundary in front of us, is basically where his career was wrecked.
Starting point is 00:02:41 So, yeah, there've been to bad ones. I mean, Steve Harmeson ball was extraordinary. Well, you can go all the way back. I mean, Michael Slater banging the ball for four. Rory Burns, as we know, NASA's decision, I just remember everyone is being absolutely astonished when the announcement came through, they had chosen to stick Australia in.
Starting point is 00:02:57 it was all those sorts of things yeah I mean it's it but it has usually been or virtually always been the first stop and so I think all the sort of the tension the apprehension and everything else that we saw like a pressure cooker in Perth hopefully from England's perspective
Starting point is 00:03:14 will have dissipated a bit so I think the players from both sides were kind of bouncing around like Deerousel bunnies to be honest they were so revved up by everything and so hopefully that has gone dissipated now and these two teams can just get on and play I've been to day-night test matches in Adelaide and in Hobart as well.
Starting point is 00:03:31 We had that four years ago, Corby. How does it differ here at the Gabba from those places? Well, the storm season of which we're in at the moment is clearly a big impact on the conditions here. And generally, they roll in in the early evening. Now, we are lucky looking at the forecast that the first of those that we're going to get during this test match is not until day four. And the way that this has panned out recently, obviously, given what we saw in the first test in Perth, means that we might not still be going on day four, so that may not be too much of a problem for...
Starting point is 00:04:01 I didn't say which way, I didn't say which way. But it is, I mean, it's a recent, at least when you look at the day-night test matches here and you're trying to paint some kind of optimism from an England point of view, the last time the Aussies played a day-night test here, Shamar Joseph happened to them where he picked up seven wickets in the last inning to that match.
Starting point is 00:04:17 The West Indies got home by eight runs. And there was another test going back to 2016-17, which was the first pink ball day-nighter here. and Assad Shafik scored a memorable hundred and Pakistan nearly chased down 490 they got within 30 runs of a world record chase so interestingly as dominant as the Aussies have been here a couple of times they've been vulnerable
Starting point is 00:04:35 one in which they lost was a pink ball fixture there's a lot of grass on that pitch too I think that will surprise people pink ball grass humidity twilight you know there's a there's a recipe there for a lot of quick bowling and scene bowling and if you took all those factors in let's say we haven't seen a single ball in Perth and you said these are the conditions in Perth and these are the conditions
Starting point is 00:04:55 in Brisbane before the start of a test. Most people would think, oh, the Brisbane test is going to go shorter than the Perth test, given all those things that have baked into it. And yet what we've just witnessed in Perth is a two-day test and you think, surely we can't get something that short again. Well, I hope not. It has been an interesting time, hasn't it? I mean, I even had Australians today at a lunch I was attending actually saying that they hoped England would win this match. Now, I didn't believe them. But you're sort of hearing that message because we want a good series. And the fact is, if England lose here,
Starting point is 00:05:26 you know, that could be the start of all sorts of stuff, of unraveling things. And to come back from two-neal down, very, very difficult indeed. So this is a massive test for Stokes and McCullum, Rob Key, all those who's signed off the way that this tour has been run. They've chosen to do it their way. We've had that debate.
Starting point is 00:05:46 They've got to make it work. And if it doesn't work, then that's when the questions will be asked. So we will hear from Steve Smith in a moment. He's been talking to Corbyn, whether he's going to be captaining tomorrow, remains to be seen. We'll get into that in a second as well. But first we'll hear from the England captain Ben Stokes, who Jonathan spoke to a little bit earlier on. The very first thing we should mention, Agers, and the way that you started with Ben Stokes, was talking about Robin Smith, whose death was announced yesterday.
Starting point is 00:06:14 Such terribly sad news, particularly since he was around at Perth, wasn't he? we were due to be interviewing him on test match special. He's had a very difficult time over the last few years. And then yesterday, the really upsetting news that he'd passed away. Yeah. We were surprised by the news, not necessarily. He has been very ill for some time. And so he's only recently really come out of hospital and been cared for.
Starting point is 00:06:41 But he was a very fine player. The lovely thing about Robin, he was so courteous, so polite. not the batsman you know the batsman you saw the rasping cut and the hook shots and the bravery that you saw and kind of the almost exaggerated way they got out of the way of the short ball
Starting point is 00:07:02 I saw a picture of it today and it sort of brought back the memory of there'll be arms and a bat and everything will be all over the place so the ball flew past his nose both feet off the ground he was a very brave batsman and a really good player he struggled against spin you know he was a good player of fast bowling. But I think that what most people remember Robin, those of us who played
Starting point is 00:07:24 against him, yeah, even, but dealt with him otherwise in this, you know, the interview situation and so on that you do with the England team. She was such a very courteous, very polite man. It's very, you know, terribly sad. So very sad news and something for Ben Stokes to reflect on with Jonathan. We're informed yesterday around, yeah, the sad news of Robin. I didn't know him at all. really but I knew a lot of people who did and the sort of everyone said the same thing about Robin you know just absolute belt of a bloke and ever said he was sort of a player who was you know you hear the saying a lot ahead of his time everyone just mentions the square cut and the pull shot but yeah it's never nice news to hear of
Starting point is 00:08:07 someone who's represented the country who's passed away a lot sooner than they should have done and I think it's it's a bit harder when you realize sort of I was only a week 10 days ago where he's Fred asked him to come in and speak with the Young Lions and also last week at the test match where he's, yeah, you know, I think going in and, you know, into the commentary box and doing some talks and being very open and honest about some of the struggles throughout his life. So I guess when you take that in consideration that it wasn't a very long time ago at all to then, yeah, married that up with the news we got yesterday. It's very sad. Yeah. You'd have liked the way he played. He was a punchy, pugnicious player. Now, let's talk about what we've got here. There's a lot of grass on that pitch, isn't there?
Starting point is 00:08:51 Is that more than you expected? I didn't really know what to expect, to be honest, and that's what we've got. So, yeah, we'll have to see how it plays out. Yeah, so the balance of the side with the spinner coming in, bouncing in spinner, I guess, Will Jacks, isn't it? How does that marry up with the conditions that you see there? Yeah, it's always, it's pink ball games.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Yeah, it's always one of probably the most, the one you have to think about the most because there are certain periods in the game where obviously conditions massively change and how you try and use that in your favour. So it's just, yeah, you feel like you've got to put a lot of thought and an effort not only to what balance your team feels like is going to be best for this,
Starting point is 00:09:36 but also, yeah, the lights. Yes. How, you know, in particular this one, how you feel like your spinner is going to affect the game. Do you think you will? You're going to spend a might affect the game? Well, look, we've looked into the day-night games here in Australia.
Starting point is 00:09:54 Obviously, there's predominantly, I think quite a few of them have been playing at Adelaide. But, yeah, look, we've looked into that. And obviously, with having the ability that Will Jacks had with a bat down at 8 as well. You know, we just feel that this week, that this was our 11 that we thought was going to give us the best chance of winning. Yeah. If we're worried about Mark Wood, it's disappointing news, obviously. any progress? I mean you're expecting him to be able to play a part in the series? Yeah, certainly the plan. Yeah, a bit of a setback and
Starting point is 00:10:22 disappointing moment for Woody but he's doing everything he can. The medical guys are doing everything they can to allow him to you know hopefully be in contention for selection for the remaining three games but yeah look we'll just see how things play out but yeah look we're doing everything we can he's doing everything he can to give himself a chance of being available for the rest of it so. So you chose to come through together to Brisbane to reflect I guess and also move on from what happened in Perth what sort of thing have you I think about I'm not going to mention the cycling but
Starting point is 00:10:53 some scooter actually scooters but you know what have you done what what do you think puts you have done that puts you in a good position for this game to start afresh yeah the the game finished in two days I just thought earlier than planned and it was you know important for us to to really reflect on that and make sure that we didn't just go right over and Dunworth move on to Brisbane because those discussions are so vital in the first step to sort of moving away from that and getting over that and then concentrating on that and when you have those conversations as a group in an environment which isn't almost like classroom-esque if that makes sense you know the best
Starting point is 00:11:36 conversations happen when they're just sort of you seem to find yourself in a team room together and then conversation just flows and flows and flows and um Yeah, there's a team, look, there were moments in that test match where we know that we could have been a lot better. But also, there was a lot of real positives to take out of that game. We know that we were ahead of that game for the vast majority of the time. It was also frustrated you even more. I mean, the fact that you look back at that and think we should have won that way. Well, definitely. We all know that.
Starting point is 00:12:05 We all know that that was a game that slipped out of our hands. And, you know, there was some moments in that game that sort of we contributed towards that. We've done that, we've reflected on all those kind of things, we've looked at those areas where we feel like we could have been a lot better. And then we moved over to Brisbane and, yeah, look, we had more of an opportunity to get into here to Brisbane. I can't believe, like the first thing we felt was when we stepped off the plane was coming to the sun and you just start drinking sweat, the humidity here was completely different. We've had, this is our now fifth day of training getting ready for this pink ball game.
Starting point is 00:12:42 So, look, we've trained in the... in the normal light, we've trained on the light, so yeah, look, we've prepared very, very well for this and, you know, we've given ourselves a real look at what things might change in terms of, you know, what it's like to bat and bowl underlights and not on the lights as well. Yeah, but would there be a change? But there were some dismissals that were disappointed the batsman, I think, in Perth. Is that an area that you've really kind of been looking at and trying to improve? Yeah, look, I think when, As I've just said, you know, there were moments in the games where, you know, we've all looked back on that and, you know, as a group and as individuals where, you know, where we could have been better, as I said. And when we say we're going to stick to our process, our process has been, is very simple. It's put teams under pressure, absolve the pressure when it's needed to chase the ball as hard as you can to the boundary and leave everything out on the field. That is our process of test cricket.
Starting point is 00:13:41 and yeah we could have been better absorbing that pressure last week we know that in those you know third and fourth innings not only with the bat but also with the ball because we know that you know when we are on top we you know we're very good at drumming that home but yeah those those moments are the last week are where we could have improved on definitely and we all know that and we speak about that kind of stuff and yeah we've addressed that moved on and it's all been about Brisbane since we've done that yeah it's easy to develop a kind of a bunker mentality siege mentality you've got so much press so many crazy front page photographs and stories going on it kind of all adds to that that volume that noise isn't it that you experience how are you
Starting point is 00:14:27 handling all of that yeah it's it was we knew what we were coming into away from the cricket you know we knew it was going to be like and i guess knowing that and um sort of talking about this is what it's going to be like. It does actually make it a little bit easier when it is happening. Is it laugh at some of the stories? I don't know what else there is to do really. So yeah, it's part of it.
Starting point is 00:14:56 You know, it always had, I think before my time, after my time, it will always be the same in Australia. And that's absolutely fine. But yeah, it's part of coming to Australia, a part of playing in the National Series out here, so yeah, it's all good. Okay. Last thought about this game, Ben, a lot of hinges on this, isn't it? I mean, two nil down would be a very difficult situation to be in, not that you're considering that, of course, but this is a huge game in this series, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:15:26 Yeah, as last week was a huge game. This week's a huge game, every game is a huge game, but in the series of this context, it's massive and we're very, very excited to get going this week and hopefully we can get the series back to 1-1 and continue from there mate well that was ben stokes talking to jonathan a little bit earlier on sitting in the stands here in the twilight in brisbane um interesting i thought his body language ben stokes this evening jonathan he was very relaxed a little relaxed than last time he was quite late back i know yes last time was quite spicy wasn't it i thought he spoke really um quite clearly about what they have talked about since Perth.
Starting point is 00:16:08 And that's not in a dredging up all the old stuff again. But if they haven't really analyzed what went wrong in Perth and they haven't come up with ways of actually batting particularly better than they did in Perth
Starting point is 00:16:19 and there's hardly a point in playing the games. If you think of a bat like that again come out as recklessly as that then they've learnt nothing. So I'll go back to the point I made before we heard from Stokes there that you know this is the way they've chosen to play. You have to change it sometimes.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And the way that they played in Perth was not good enough. It's unacceptable. but there was not the discipline that you have to have in a test match, particularly a test match like this, where the conditions can change really quite quickly. So we'll see. There's still that sort of that Canberra debate.
Starting point is 00:16:49 I know it's cold there and everything else, but then you hear Ben talking about all the difficulties of the pink balls of, well, okay, you've chosen to do what you've done. It's up to you. There are a lot of people who felt that they should have had taken the opportunity to have played some cricket. I mean, Zach Crawley, I'm looking at him playing out there, his football now. I mean, he's going to be facing
Starting point is 00:17:07 Mitch Stark again possibly tomorrow with that pair hanging over his head that he hasn't been able to get rid of at all and I think he wakes up in the night screaming and looking at Mitchell Stark rugging in because he hasn't had the opportunity to get rid of it and I would still
Starting point is 00:17:23 maintain that there was not all of them but some of the players would have been better off by going and having a hit and scoring some runs. They have had four pretty intense net sessions here at the Gabber though haven't they Corbin over the last few days? during the daytime, in the heat, during the evening time. So we're just sitting here, as we are at the moment,
Starting point is 00:17:42 waiting for them to go into the nets. And they didn't look, from what I saw a couple of days ago, they didn't look like they were holding back, you know, that they were getting those balls pinging down as fast as you possibly can with the ball chucker. And I know Matthew Hayden talks about the nets here at the Gabba that out of any of the Australian venues, they are the ones where the practice pitches replicate
Starting point is 00:18:01 what happens out in the middle more than any other. I'll probably tend to agree with Agass a little bit in terms of being out there in the centre wicket and actually seeing that... There's no pressure in the nets. And seeing the numbers tick over against your name, there's something about it, isn't there? As opposed to having the big round zero next to his name
Starting point is 00:18:16 when he walks out to bat. The other thing about adaptability and Smith made a point of this in his press conference where he essentially said, hey, that's what we do well in these conditions. And it almost felt like as much as he was praising his team, he was almost sending a message to England saying, hey, if you don't do this, you're not going to be able to compete with us.
Starting point is 00:18:34 and driving on the up in particular. I mean, you could write, you could write the thickest book imaginable with many chapters about touring teams coming to Australia, getting caught driving on the up, and the top six batsmen, whether it was the first or second innings for England, all six of them were out driving on the up, caught in the cordon at some stage in that test match. So people recall the famous innings from Sachin Dendouker at the SCJ
Starting point is 00:18:56 all those years ago, and of course famously didn't play a single cover drive in his glorious innings there. So England have to be extremely disciplined and try to put it away. I'm sure they will have sat down there and looked at the videos. And we've got there are inexperienced players in this England team, Agers, but there are players like Joe Root, who's played multiple innings. And to make those kind of mistakes, surely they're not going to make those mistakes.
Starting point is 00:19:21 No, but again, people would argue that's because I haven't really played much cricket. You can go in the nets, you can play big booming drives in the net. You know, okay, you might get inside Knicks past the stumps or into the stumps or whatever. everybody throw the ball back and you face the next ball. It's not the same as walking off, you know, bold, stark naught to your name and, you know, bagging a pair. So they've got to somehow tune their minds to playing a more disciplined game. But then you can't help but feel. And I think there's been, I think there's been a lot of over-the-top stuff written about England and the arrogance and that stuff.
Starting point is 00:19:56 And, you know, that's, I think, been a little bit harsh. I don't think necessarily that Stokes, for instance, is an arrogant man at all, actually. But you can see why it's used if a team refuses to adapt to and make themselves better and to stubbornly say, well, this is how we play, so we're going to keep playing. This is our blueprint, as McCullum kept saying at the end of the last test, well, okay, but perhaps your blueprint isn't right, Baz. Perhaps you've got to refine your blueprint. You've got to learn because the evidence was there in Perth that that actually is not the way to play and win matches here.
Starting point is 00:20:30 I mean, he didn't say, did he, I mean, Ben Stokes, he listed the four things that England, that that is their mantra, if you like, you know, one is kind of putting pressure on, one is absorbing pressure, and I can't remember what the other two were. But, I mean, you know, you can't really argue in lots of ways. You know, they're not saying, we're going to go on the attack whatever the situation is. And I think here in Australia, that's almost been slightly the way that Basball has been maybe slightly misrepresented, that it's always about, always about going on the attack. Well, you look at the Perth test match, I mean, the ultimate way to go on the attack in the series
Starting point is 00:21:04 would have been keeping the Australian bowlers in the dirt for as long as possible. It's not necessarily scoring at 6, 7, 8 and over. It was just being able to bat time. And as much as they're saying that publicly, and that's the rhetoric, I'm with you. I hope they're saying something differently internally. They don't have to come out and say to all of us, say, we got it wrong and whatever else. But if they're telling themselves internally that, then we're going to have an issue, and this is going to be another short test match here in Brisbane.
Starting point is 00:21:28 We'll see, won't we? We'll see from fairly early on. I'm looking at Joe Root now. He'll have been bitterly disappointed with that. He got out there. And he's a better player than that. And he, I'm sure, will have looked at it. And he'll be looking to adapt his game.
Starting point is 00:21:44 But again, I go back to that beating the same old drum. To go out into a game and score a little 70 or 80 or something, that does much more than any amount of net practice. So a quick reminder, you can hear every ball of the second Ash's test at the Gabba. 4 a.m. Thursday morning, the first ball is bold. And to find us, all you need to do is search Ashes on BBC Sounds. There you'll find all our podcast, live commentaries, and Andy Zaltzman's daily TMS quiz. The TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live. Bring more gear, carry more passengers, face greater challenges. Welcome to the world of
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Starting point is 00:23:12 Steve, you're on captaincy duties. Are you captaining the team tomorrow? We'll wait and see. There's plenty of options on the table. Obviously, Paddy's pretty close. He's been bowling really well in the nets And it'll probably be determined After we have a look at the surface
Starting point is 00:23:29 When they give it a snippet at 3 o'clock That's pretty exciting to think that He was really ruled out of this test match And clearly is ahead of schedule To now be in the mix at least 24 hours out Yeah, he's been bowling obviously for a few weeks And pulling up well from his bowls And ramping his numbers up quickly
Starting point is 00:23:46 But yeah, he's feeling good So he's bowling nicely in the nets Having faced him He's getting the ball down at nice pace and seeming it around like he does. So, yeah, he's not far off. So if he plays, he captains? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:59 Your record's looking really good, though. Seven times since Pat's taken over the main job and you're still undefeated. Yeah, I mean, we've had a pretty good team the last few years, so it's easy to captain in a way. It's, you know, we've had some really good success. So I'm happy to hand it back and, you know, I'll help him out like I do every other game.
Starting point is 00:24:17 Well, I was about to say, I like to refer to you guys as almost the test cricket's version of co-captains, that you guys sort of run the show and he speaks to you a lot tactically out there on the field. Does the job change much when Pat's not there for what you have to do compared to when he is there, given how much I guess you guys collaborate anyway? He makes the decisions.
Starting point is 00:24:35 I just help him out when I need to. Yeah, for me, it's obviously different when I'm in charge and I have to make all the decisions. And, you know, I have people around helping me as well. So, you know, that's just how a team works. No, was he? So he's not going to play here in Brisbane. How close was he to play in his?
Starting point is 00:24:53 in what is now his home test match? I'm not sure how close he was, but yeah, he tried to do everything he could to get up for it. Yeah, unfortunately he couldn't tick a couple of the boxes and, yeah, it was unavailable. Josh Inglis comes in? He's in the mix, yeah, I think.
Starting point is 00:25:09 We'll know more later on this afternoon how we want to go about things and how we match up, but yeah, he's certainly in the mix. To change the cordon, who becomes the first slipper? I think Mann might be slotting in the armchair, which I prefer him out in the field somewhere so I don't have to listen to him but he catches well
Starting point is 00:25:28 hopefully I can keep him focused there next to me for a while when not much is happening but no I think he's going to slot into the armchair we saw you at training during the week with the eye black on which we've seen obviously in American sports you've got your time now between Australia and the US where did the inspiration come from to roll with the eye black and will we see you wear it in the test?
Starting point is 00:25:49 I thought about it last week I was like Maybe I'll give these a go up. I struggle a little bit, picking up the pink ball, both day and night, the glare off either the side screen and the ball and the lights on the ball. It's tricky and, yeah, I've trialled it out in the nets and, you know, I currently believe it makes a pretty significant difference. So, yeah, I'll be rocking it.
Starting point is 00:26:12 So is it glare or is it the difference between light and darker? What is it in particular that it aids with? Yeah, I mean, just the light coming in and then the vision of the pink ball, it's pretty bright itself. And, yeah, trailed it out a couple of times. And, yeah, like I said, I feel like it's making a difference. So, you know, it's not going to hurt. If anything can help, you know, I'll give it a go.
Starting point is 00:26:32 The pink ball? What are some of the unique challenges in particular about the pink ball with, obviously it itself has had a few changes over the decade that we've been playing in test cricket? Yeah, I mean, at times it can have a mind of its own. You know, things can change really quickly, given the time of day, how old the ball is, how new the ball is. and the wicket if it softens it up, things like that.
Starting point is 00:26:55 So, you know, there's plenty of intricacies that go into the game of pink ball test cricket. You've got to try and stick to, you know, each period and play according to what's going on at that certain time and adapt accordingly when things do change really quickly. Well, that was Steve Smith, who's been talking to Corbyn Middleness here at the Gabba. Corby, there are a lot of unanswered questions in that interview. you because we don't actually know as things stand who is going to be walking out there at half-past one lunchtime tomorrow to toss the coin with Ben Stokes just explain well Pat Cummins will be there if he's in the 11th so Smith went as far as to at least say
Starting point is 00:27:39 that that hey if Pat's going to be here I'll no longer be the skipper he'll have the job back as you'd expect but the Pat Cummins story's been fascinating where he's had this back injury. He was ruled out of the first test. We saw him in Perth bowling incredibly well in the in the nets and you thought, gee, this guy's really close. And then as soon as the test finished, Andrew McDonald moved to try and calm down some of the hysteria and basically said, look, he's still a little way off yet. We're not expecting him to play. And then sure enough, a couple of days later, they ruled him out of this second test match. Most people arrive in Brisbane today and the buildup continues obviously. And there are a few reports coming out saying,
Starting point is 00:28:14 hey, Cummins is still very much in the mix. And by the time the Pre-test press conference takes place, which the captain ordinarily attends. Steve Smith showed up and was fielding questions, and I don't know if it adds to some of the mystery around it all or whether he's genuinely in the mix. But Pat rolled up a short time afterwards. He was involved in training. He went out and had a look at the pitch with the chief selector,
Starting point is 00:28:38 George Bailey, Andrew McDonald and Steve Smith. And Cummins was down on his haunches, sort of pushing at the pitch, looking at various spots. So it didn't look to me like the sign of a guy that was just a casual onlooker. He looked as if he was very interested in how that pitch was going to play. So you put your finger in the wind and it feels like Pat has said to them, hey, I'm ready to go. There's nothing holding me back. And if I'm fit and available and you guys see that, and I've done the work, my workload's up, this is an Ashes test match on the captain of the
Starting point is 00:29:06 team. I want to play. And Australia are going to give him every chance. They're going to wait till the toss tomorrow to put their final 11 in. Very unusual. For a fast bowler to go through of that and still be waiting up to the toss. You normally need to prove your fit the day before, but the very latest. So it's interesting, I mean, one look at that pitch, and I suspect he'll link himself in the side. There's so
Starting point is 00:29:30 much grass on it. I mean, cool. And Australia would like their main man there in that situation with England under pressure. A lot of grass on the pitch. Well, the best fast bowlers in the modern game. Hasn't played any cricket, of course. But even, you know, I was in Sydney
Starting point is 00:29:46 five, six weeks ago, and he was bowling in the nets there. He's bowling with a pink ball, actually, interestingly enough, in the SCG. So I thought then, well, maybe he's got Brisbane in his mind to be the game that he plays him. But they know, look, you know, Australia win this game, as we've talked a few moments ago. So, I don't know. If he's, if he's good to go, then I suspect he'll play. But both Australia and England have been very gentlemanly in the way they've announced their team ahead of time over the last couple of years. Australia, obviously, under Pat Cummins and England under Ben Stokes.
Starting point is 00:30:19 Is this a bit of gamesmanship? I mean, England named 12 and then finalised their 11 at the toss in Perth, but it's very unusual from an Australian or foreign Australian team to leave it this open-ended the day before a test. Yeah, well, and particularly, I mean, I suppose because he's captain, they want to give him every chance, don't they? And just because he isn't playing, doesn't mean he isn't captain anymore.
Starting point is 00:30:39 You know, he's still very much part of the management of this team. So that's why I guess he was looking at the pitch and thinking about options if he isn't fit. I mean, who plays more often, or more interestingly, if he is fit, who isn't going to play? I mean, which one are they going to bin? So, Steve Smith did say today, Nathan Lyon will play, so it's not as if they're looking at a complete change of the makeup. So I imagine Brendan Doggett, who would be the last man in, will be the unlucky one and the first man out.
Starting point is 00:31:07 He wouldn't even confirm whether Josh Inglis is playing, which I think we all suspect Inglis is going to come and play either in the middle order or potentially is the opener. This is the other thing, this version of the Australian cricket team. They talk about fluid batting lineups and everyone can bat in any position. So either Head stays or goes back to the middle order and Inglis comes in up the top
Starting point is 00:31:26 or Inglis goes in the middle order and Head retains his opening position, which he obviously got last minute in that second innings in Perth and peeled off that memorable 100. That's the really interesting one, isn't it? Yeah, would you open with Head again after that when he's just taking the attack to the cleaners,
Starting point is 00:31:42 or be it at an attack that's pretty ragged? and a crazy, such a telegraphed policy of this trying to bounce him all the time. So they would have to restart, but it'd be tempting to open up again in the middle, wouldn't it? I would be. Yeah, absolutely. And I always think about him as a former cricketer, Agers, surely if you're standing there at the top of your mark, who do you not want to say with bat in hand? And if you're in England, you'd be thinking, I don't want this guy out here,
Starting point is 00:32:06 I don't need a batting. He did get a king pair in a game here a couple of years ago, but either side of that, he's got pink ball hundreds everywhere, He got one in Adelaide last year. He's got one here in the past. So he is, and there's always a lag with these things, and we have such reverence for Steve Smith in this country as we should. But he's Australia's premier batsman right now, Travis Head.
Starting point is 00:32:26 And yeah, I'd love to see him open. We'll see very early tomorrow, whether England bat or bowl, whether they have cleared their minds from Perth. If the bowl is running hard at head and bowed properly at him, and not in a sort of a bit slightly scarred way, then they've managed to get rid of some of them. stuff. If the bats don't come out and they're leaving more, they're not going for booming drives and they're working hard
Starting point is 00:32:47 and they really make Australia work with the wickets, they've learnt from it. So either way, we'll get an idea of what's happened these last 10 days. It's going to be absolutely fascinating what transpires, certainly in the next 48 hours and let's hope it lasts a little bit more than that as well here at the Gabba. My thanks to
Starting point is 00:33:03 Jonathan and to Corbyn, that's it from us. It all gets underway on Thursday on BBC Sounds and 5 Sports Extra from 325 in the morning. And don't forget If you miss any of the action, you could listen to highlights or catch up on the full commentary of the day's play in the Ashes feed on Sounds.
Starting point is 00:33:21 To find that, just search Ashes on BBC Sounds. This winter, cricket's oldest rivalry is reignited. England and Australia do battle to compete for the Ashes. Hear live ball-by-ball commentary on Fife Sports Extra And get analysis and reaction of every day's play With the Test Match Special podcast The Stops out of the ground Test Match Special at the Ashes
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