The Ashes

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  1. Analysis: Who is Australia debutant Brendan Doggett?published at 14:47 GMT 20 November 2025

    Srinivas Vijaykumar
    CricViz Analyst

    Scott Boland and Brendan Doggett pose for photos before the first TestImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Scott Boland, left, and Brendan Doggett, right, are the first pair of indigenous men to play in the same Australia team

    Brendan Doggett will become the 472nd player to debut for Australia in Tests when he features in the opening Ashes Test at Perth Stadium on Friday.

    Doggett gets his opportunity after regularly being part of the Test set-up in recent times: first when India toured Australia last year, and as a reserve player in the squad for the World Test Championship final against South Africa in June.

    The right-arm fast-medium bowler made his first-class debut in October 2017 and has since played 50 matches, taking 190 wickets at a healthy average of 26.5.

    He made his first-class debut for Queensland, featuring in four Sheffield Shield seasons, before moving to South Australia at the start of the 2021-22 season.

    Since moving to South Australia, his numbers have improved with 110 wickets at an average of 24.5 compared to his 56 wickets at 30.8 playing for Queensland.

    Doggett's recent form for South Australia has played a big part in his inclusion in the Test set-up.

    In Sheffield Shield matches since the start of the 2023-24 season, he has taken 78 wickets in 15 matches at 21.7 and with a strike-rate of 38.1.

    Of the 18 bowlers with 50+ wickets in the Sheffield Shield in this timeline, only Scott Boland (37.5) has a better strike-rate than Doggett.

    The majority of the England players in the touring Ashes squad haven't faced Doggett in any form of professional cricket.

    Jacob Bethell and Josh Tongue have previously faced him on one occasion each, the former in a Big Bash League (BBL) game in January 2025 and the latter in an England Lions v Australia A first-class match a month later.

    In matches featuring Doggett with ball-tracking data in our database, albeit all from T20s in the (BBL), he has operated generally in the 84-86mph range.

    In the BBL, he's got a good record bowling slightly short of a good length, averaging 20 at a strike-rate of 15 with deliveries in the 8-9m range.

    On this Perth Stadium pitch with the extra pace and bounce, it'll be interesting to see Doggett's returns with the red ball.

  2. Analysis: Who is Australia debutant Jake Weatherald?published at 13:16 GMT 20 November 2025

    Ben Jones
    CricViz Analyst

    Jake Weatherald at Australia trainingImage source, Getty Images

    As tends to be the way with Australian selection these days, Jake Weatherald is on the older side at 31.

    He has played the bulk of his red-ball cricket for South Australia, making 60 first-class appearances for them over six seasons.

    However, his career has been kickstarted with a move to Tasmania in 2023-24 and his record has been strong there. Across 15 matches he's made three centuries, averaging a tick under 45.

    His returns specifically this season - 301 runs at 38 - are less impressive, with no centuries from his eight visits to the crease.

    Weatherald is a pure opening batter, with all 145 of his innings in first-class cricket coming at the top of the order. In many ways he's a classic left-handed opener, looking to score heavily square of the wicket, particularly through point; since joining Tasmania, he averages 136 with the cut shot.

    However, he is a far more aggressive player than his opening partner Usman Khawaja.

    Since moving to Tasmania two years ago, Weatherald's first-class strike-rate is 68, the seventh quickest in the world among opening batters, and comparable to the likes of Yashasvi Jaiswal, Ben Duckett, and Zak Crawley - albeit at a lower level.

    That strokeplay does naturally come with a counter - Weatherald's defensive technique does come with questions.

    In the last two Shield seasons, he's been dismissed once every 41 defensive shots he plays, a significantly low figure for a specialist batter, let alone an opener - you can compare that with Marnus Labuschagne (154 defensive shots per dismissal) and Cameron Green (92) for context.

    England have moved away from opposition analysis in recent times, but even basic research will unearth a pattern of dismissals for Weatherald.

    Across his career against right-arm quicks, he much prefers bowling coming round the wicket, averaging 57 when they do so compared to 32 when they stay over the wicket.

    Jofra Archer will be licking his lips, averaging just 18 against left-handers from that angle.

  3. Aussies continue to goad England cricketerspublished at 13:00 GMT 20 November 2025

    Henry Moeran
    BBC Test Match Special in Perth

    Life size box of tissues

    Ashes fever has reached seemingly unprecedented levels here in Perth, with local newspapers and betting companies taking particular delight in trying to rile the England team and their fans.

    On one of the high streets, a monster box of tissues, designed for 'thin-skinned' Poms, has appeared.

    It's possibly worth noting the cries for England to 'get over' sandpaper-gate in the years since the scandal have not been quite as enthusiastically embraced by Australians 'getting over' the incident involving Bairstow and Alex Carey.

    And The West Australian has taken aim, once again, with its front page...

    West Australian newspaperImage source, West Australian
  4. England get Ashes warning over Aussie 'Mankading'published at 12:34 GMT 20 November 2025

    Timothy Abraham
    BBC Sport Journalist

    Ben Stokes, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ollie Pope, Zak Crawley and Mark Wood chat during an England team photoImage source, Getty Images

    England's batters have been warned to stay in their crease at the non-striker's end during the Ashes to prevent Australia's bowlers 'Mankading' them.

    Former England seamer Matthew Hoggard said Ben Stokes and his team-mates need to be on their guard against a mode of dismissal which has occurred just four times in the history of Test cricket.

    Hoggard "hated" the way Jonny Bairstow was controversially run out by Australia wicketkeeper Alex Carey during the 2023 Ashes even though it was "within the laws of the game".

    Australia captain Pat Cummins declined to recall Bairstow, who left his ground at the striker's end during the Lord's Test thinking the ball was dead and over had been called.

    And with the stakes so high in the forthcoming Ashes, Hoggard could not rule out the Aussies using an equally contentious - but legal - mode of taking wickets.

    "I cannot envisage Ben Stokes doing it [Mankading]. I just don't think he would. Or Brendon McCullum [wanting England] doing that," Hoggard told BBC Sport.

    "I don't see it coming from an English side of things. When you talk about Australia, they had a captain who used to rub the ball with sandpaper. So who knows?"

    Hoggard, who was part of England's 2005 Ashes-winning team, offered a piece of straightforward advice before Friday's first Test in Perth.

    "Don't leave your crease and you'll be all right. It's as simple as that," he added.

    Hoggard hopes the Ashes isn't overshadowed by "the darker side of cricket" such as "a Mankad or controversial decision" but does not want the series to lose any of its spice.

    "You want that little bit of needle," said Hoggard, who took 248 wickets in 67 Tests for England between 2000 and 2008.

    "You want a little bit of bashing heads. But you don't want it to go too far.

    "You've got to be smart the way about the way you try and wind the opposition up."

  5. 'Australian public wants to see Bazball destroyed'published at 09:46 GMT 20 November 2025

    Ben Stokes (left) with his arms folded in conversation with Brendon McCullum, who is wearing a cap and sunglasses at a training session ahead of The AshesImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    England have won 25 of their 41 Tests with Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum in tandem

    Excitement is at fever pitch in Australia ahead of the first Test in Perth on Friday, with the hosts' media machine in full flow since England arrived.

    They have faced a barrage of headlines from the Australian media, led by the West Australian newspaper, making this the most anticipated Ashes series down under for many years.

    But as Australian cricket writer and broadcaster Melinda Farrell explains, it is England's 'Bazball' style of cricket that has really got under the skin of Australian cricket folk.

    So defeating the philosophy created by captain Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum is driving the Aussie psyche in the build-up.

    "Yes, Australia want to win the Ashes," Farrell told BBC Radio Lancashire, external.

    "But I think even more that, the Australian public and quite a few people in the media, they want to destroy Bazball.

    "They want to put it on a stake and burn it and throw away the Ashes into a deep, dark hole so they'll never be seen again.

    "That's the Ashes they want - the Ashes of Bazball!"