England's decision to continue with an unchanged batting lineup for the Adelaide Test against Australia has raised eyebrows among cricket fans. At 2-0 down after only six days of cricket across two Tests, England must win in Adelaide to revive any hope of lifting the urn for the first time since 2015.
Brendon McCullum's team is continuing to decompress on their break in Noosa and will return to training on Sunday. However, a refresh of the bowling attack is almost a given. For all the talk of England assembling their most hostile group of speedsters for an Ashes tour since 1970, the pace cartel has not fired.
The excitement of a thrilling display on the first day of the first Test in Perth has dissipated. To add to the disappointment, Mark Wood will soon be on the plane home. If Wood had not been passed fit for the first Test, Josh Tongue would have been the most likely beneficiary and Tongue should enter the series in Adelaide.
Tongue can be scattergun - as evident during the fifth Test against India at The Oval - but he is also a very attacking bowler. In his only Ashes Test, at Lord's in 2023, he removed Steve Smith in both innings. His knack of cleaning up the tail - his nickname is 'The Mop' - would have been very handy as England struggled against the Australia lower order in Brisbane.
If England do need to take Jamie Smith out of the firing line, the only option is to give the gloves to Ollie Pope, but Pope has problems on his own. Speaking of sliding-doors moments, there have been enough subplots to the England number-three position to fill a Tolkien novel.
It could be argued Pope might not still be England's incumbent first drop had he not dislocated his shoulder after two Tests of the last Ashes, pulled off an all-time epic knock to win the first Test against India in 2024 or scored a hundred against Zimbabwe in May. Despite seeming so high on Bethell after his breakout tour to New Zealand, England never pulled the trigger on a sustained promotion to the Test team.
As Bethell has hung around on the fringes, his career has stalled - he is still to score a first-class hundred. Meanwhile, Pope has been under constant pressure, not helped by having the vice-captaincy removed. The result is England know little more about either man than they did a year ago.
England's decision to keep Will Jacks for the Adelaide Test against Australia has also raised questions. Bashir has been hothoused in Test cricket with this tour in mind. Now there is the very real possibility England cannot pick him on it.
Brendon McCullum's team is continuing to decompress on their break in Noosa and will return to training on Sunday. However, a refresh of the bowling attack is almost a given. For all the talk of England assembling their most hostile group of speedsters for an Ashes tour since 1970, the pace cartel has not fired.
The excitement of a thrilling display on the first day of the first Test in Perth has dissipated. To add to the disappointment, Mark Wood will soon be on the plane home. If Wood had not been passed fit for the first Test, Josh Tongue would have been the most likely beneficiary and Tongue should enter the series in Adelaide.
Tongue can be scattergun - as evident during the fifth Test against India at The Oval - but he is also a very attacking bowler. In his only Ashes Test, at Lord's in 2023, he removed Steve Smith in both innings. His knack of cleaning up the tail - his nickname is 'The Mop' - would have been very handy as England struggled against the Australia lower order in Brisbane.
If England do need to take Jamie Smith out of the firing line, the only option is to give the gloves to Ollie Pope, but Pope has problems on his own. Speaking of sliding-doors moments, there have been enough subplots to the England number-three position to fill a Tolkien novel.
It could be argued Pope might not still be England's incumbent first drop had he not dislocated his shoulder after two Tests of the last Ashes, pulled off an all-time epic knock to win the first Test against India in 2024 or scored a hundred against Zimbabwe in May. Despite seeming so high on Bethell after his breakout tour to New Zealand, England never pulled the trigger on a sustained promotion to the Test team.
As Bethell has hung around on the fringes, his career has stalled - he is still to score a first-class hundred. Meanwhile, Pope has been under constant pressure, not helped by having the vice-captaincy removed. The result is England know little more about either man than they did a year ago.
England's decision to keep Will Jacks for the Adelaide Test against Australia has also raised questions. Bashir has been hothoused in Test cricket with this tour in mind. Now there is the very real possibility England cannot pick him on it.