English cricket meets Spinal Tap as Rob Key delivers latest Ashes autopsy | Barney Ronay

A picture


“It’s such a fine line between stupid and clever.” David St Hubbins, lead vocalist, Spinal Tap.“There’s a real difference between aggressive and dumb.” Rob Key, managing director, England cricket.Listening to Rob Key deliver the latest four‑yearly Ashes autopsy deep in the grey concrete underworld of the Melbourne Cricket Ground, it was tempting at first to conclude that what we have here is a basic category mistake.

A pundit is punditing his own mistakes.A fluent, interesting broadcaster is offering fluent, interesting observations about the collapse of an England tour that he, the fluent, interesting broadcaster, oversaw.And concluding, you know what, I probably did OK in the end.So maybe this is the thing.The England and Wales Cricket Board has mistakenly hired a broadcaster.

It has confused cause and effect, presentation and delivery.The Honey Monster has been put in charge of global puffed rice production.Except, after an hour of mild filler laced with the odd hidden mea culpa, this had begun to feel more like sensible planning.England’s prep for this tour has been all about horses for courses.Bashir for Adelaide.

Wood for Perth.Here we had another specialist selection: Key for the basement defeat‑explainer.In Rob Key the ECB hired the perfect person to explain the mistakes of Rob Key.This was his moment to execute.Ideally another Rob Key could now be wheeled out to pontificate on Rob Key pontificating on Rob Key.

A further layer, Rob Key cubed, could produce a clippable podcast segment on the Rob Key evisceration of Rob Key on Rob Key.And we can just drill endlessly upwards, away from the detail not towards it, into a place where nobody has to answer any real questions or carry anything resembling a can.Or at least, not yet anyway.If Key did occasionally sound a bit like the members of Spinal Tap attempting to process their own disastrous arena tour of America, then this is also fine.It’s part of the role, like a football manager, sport’s ultimate patsy, there to draw the ire of the crowd away from those in real authority.

“I don’t want to talk about the structure,” he said at one point, refusing to address anything to do with the nuts and bolts of the system he manages and directs.Understandably so.The structure appoints engaging amateurs to its highest posts.The structure hires Rob Key to explain Rob Key.This is the structure right here in front of you.

With this in mind it was in many ways a very polished bumbling performance, pitched as a classic fish-out-of-water comedy, the nice, reasonable man out of his depth.There were some obvious evasions.Key spent a lot of time talking in the passive voice about bad choices and failings of process, as though this was all actually someone else’s area.There was some whaddaya gonna do over the fact the New Zealand white-ball tour didn’t turn out to be ideal prep for an Ashes series, and that the lone warm-up game didn’t actually replicate conditions in Perth.There was also a great deal of prevarication, a jazz odyssey of almost-statements.

In an hour spent trying to explain the collapse of England’s exuberantly confident Test match machine at first contact with Australia, the managing director said 131 you knows, 76 I thinks, 20 probably/maybes, 17 coulds and mights, and four I don’t knows.Chuck in a three‑minute fire drill in the middle and what were you left with?“Everything that I’ve heard so far, I was told that they sat down, had lunch, had dinner, didn’t go out late, had the odd drink, and I don’t mind that.” Rob Key.“Have a good time – all the time.” Viv Savage, drummer, Spinal Tap.

Most obviously Key came across as seriously under-briefed on the Noosa interlude, something that is entirely in keeping with a setup so light on details.You can take a view on whether it actually matters if cricketers have a few beers on a mid-series break.But we are where we are, and a different kind of administrator would have spent the previous six hours getting right across this, diving head first into every detail of a story that will now dog the actual story.This article includes content provided by Instagram.We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies.

To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.Instead Key made the tactical mistake of saying that he will definitely look into it.This, then, becomes England Investigate Noosa Trip, another headline, another beat in the story, more smoke even if there is no more fire (and there may well be some of that).It is unfair in many ways.Key is a non-drinker.

He made it clear he doesn’t think athletes should be boozing.So … How did they … Who decided that … Who exactly is the daddy here? More slackness.More winging it.In the end it will come sweating out through the pores.“I thought Brendon was right talking about overpreparing.

I’m not sure overpreparing was the right term.We just did the same thing over and over again.” Rob Key.“For every one single thing that goes wrong, a hundred things go right.” Ian Faith, tour manager, Spinal Tap.

There was resolute backing for Brendon McCullum.Key was adamant McCullum can’t be held responsible for players seeming ill-prepared for the conditions.He maintained that paying attention only to the “top two inches” is enough on the most exacting mission any of these players will undertake.What does this mean? Key hired and empowered McCullum.Are we finding out that the two come and go as a pair? Does unflinching support mean they grow ever harder and costlier to sack? More simply, the highs and lows of the last two exciting years will be Key’s legacy in whatever comes next.

Best to take a line now and hold it.“I still think that’s right.I think [Michael] Neser gave us a lesson in how to run in and slam the wicket hard.You know, they’re hitting the bat hard.They might be 82-83mph on the speed gun.

But they’re hitting the bat harder than that.” Rob Key.“We’ve got armadillos in our trousers.I mean, it’s really quite frightening.And they run screaming.

” Nigel Tufnel, guitarist, Spinal Tap.Key was most defiant on the question of whether he was right to say there was no place for medium-paced bowling in the Ashes, the need to junk all that county powder‑puff stuff, a statement that was extracted and cut next to Neser and Scott Boland bowling England out with Alex Carey up to the stumps.He pointed out that what he actually said was 75mph bowling, the floatier stuff you do see in the championship.He made the point Neser and Boland are actually, well, terrifying when they do this: pitch‑hitting, glove-pounding, crease-attacking demons.It was telling in two ways.

Key was across the detail here.He had scrolled Insta and X.He’s online.He’s a media man.And to be fair it would have made a good segment.

Rattled Key hits back.MD lashes haters.He may not know when it rains in New Zealand.But he does know this stuff.“I looked at the huddle first day at Lord’s and you look around and there’s 38 people.

” Rob Key.“Hundreds of years before the dawn of history lived an ancient race of people.The Druids.No one knows who they were.Or what they were doing.

” Stonehenge, Spinal Tap.There were questions about the scarcity of specialist skills coaches on tour.Key pointed out that stripping back and taking away the noise was consistent with the project.He also admitted England were probably a bit too stripped back in the end.And buried in the filibuster, peeping out like rabbits in the tree line, there were some genuine admissions of fault.

“Have we got the most out of the players that we’ve got? And there’s no question for me.I don’t think we have.” “Did we give them the best chance to succeed in Perth? The players we had, we haven’t helped them get to their best, and that’s on us as a setup.” There was also perspective, too much perspective perhaps, from someone who knows both how “bloody tough” Ashes cricket can be and how “bloody good” this Australia team are.In the end none of this is really Key’s doing.

He is here to broadcast, to embody the limits of the system that appointed him, a non-details man supported by another non-details man, to manage a highly detailed performance environment, and then thought that would be enough.It is also wrong to suggest Key doesn’t care about county cricket.He does, however, know its failings, and clearly feels disempowered to do anything about them.He talked about “valuing cricketers that had been undervalued for a while”.“There is talent in our game, and our job as an England men’s setup is to bring that in and make sure it can develop.

”By the end the thought occurred that Rob Key would perhaps be the ideal person to conduct the inevitable review into Rob Key’s England.Not so much on detail or solutions or critiquing the system, but themes and thoughts, interestingly expressed.Join us again after the four-year break.Same basement.Similar script.

societySee all
A picture

Prosecutions for strangulation in England and Wales increase sixfold in three years

The number of suspects charged for strangulation and suffocation in England and Wales has increased almost sixfold in the three years since the offence was first introduced, Crown Prosecution Service data has revealed.Brought in under the Domestic Abuse Act, which came into force in 2022, the legislation closed a gap in the existing law, giving courts much greater sentencing powers.Kate Brown, the CPS’s lead prosecutor for domestic abuse, said that previously there had been “a lot of cases for which it didn’t seem like we had the right offence”, and the new legislation marked “a significant shift in recognising the serious nature of the offence”.“There were some thoughts that it might not be necessary and that the act of strangulation or suffocation could be covered by other offences,” she said, but added that the options previously open to prosecutors “didn’t really hit the mark in terms of the seriousness, because strangulation is a really serious offence”.Suffocation and strangulation carries a maximum sentence of five years’ imprisonment, whereas previously, except for the most serious cases which could be charged as grievous bodily harm or attempted murder, prosecutors were having to charge offenders with common assault, which carries a much lesser maximum sentence of six months

A picture

Resident doctors say they will resume talks to avoid further strikes with ‘can-do spirit’

Resident doctors have said they will approach talks with Wes Streeting with a “can-do spirit” to avoid further strikes in the new year, as their five-day action ended on Monday morning.The British Medical Association called on the health secretary to come to the table with the same “constructive” attitude, saying the tone of 11th-hour talks before their stoppage had been encouraging but too late to avoid the strike in England.Streeting also signalled his determination to get back to the talks, saying he did “not want to see a single day of industrial action in the NHS in 2026”, and that he would “be doing everything I can to make this a reality”.“My door remains open, as it always has done, and I’m determined to resume discussions with the BMA in the new year to put an end to these damaging cycles of disruption,” he said.Streeting and Keir Starmer have taken a tough line towards the strike, with the prime minister saying it was “beyond belief” that it should go ahead when the flu-hit NHS was facing its worst crisis since Covid

A picture

One in eight of 14- to 17-year-olds in Great Britain say they have used nicotine pouches

One in eight teenagers aged 14 to 17 have used nicotine pouches, a survey has found, adding to health experts’ concern about their growing popularity.Users hold the small sachets, which look like mini-teabags and are often flavoured, in their mouths to enjoy the release of the nicotine they contain. They are also known as “snus”.Unlike smoking the pouches do not raise the risk of cancer, but they have caused alarm because of the fear that users could become addicted to nicotine and suffer mouth and dental problems.A survey of 500 teenagers aged 14 to 17 in England, Scotland and Wales found that 13% have used a nicotine pouch, of whom 30% said they did so at least once a week

A picture

From Charles Darwin to Noel Gallagher, here’s inspiration for young stammerers

What a great piece by Ross Coleman about embarking on his speech therapy programme for stammering (My cultural awakening: Jonathan Groff inspired me to overcome my stammer, 6 December). Coleman was inspired by the example of Jonathan Groff, who is not a stammerer, tackling something head-on.The McGuire Programme that Coleman signed up for seems to have helped many people. While Groff served as his inspiration, there are no shortage of actual stammerers who have compelling stories to motivate people as they navigate the choppy waters caused by their speech.The Stuttering Foundation’s website has an intriguing “celebrity corner” with biographical articles of famous stammerers including Marilyn Monroe, Bruce Willis, and BB King

A picture

Christmas burnout: why stressed parents find it ‘harder to be emotionally honest with children’

Advent calendars, check. Tree and decorations, check. Teachers’ presents, nativity costumes and a whole new ticketing system for the PTA’s Santa’s grotto, check. But the Christmas cards remain unwritten, the to-do list keeps growing, and that Labubu doll your child desperately wants appears to have vanished from the face of the earth.If you’re feeling frayed in the final days before Christmas, you’re not alone

A picture

Labour admits 60% of parents wrongly targeted in HMRC child benefit fraud crackdown

More than 60% of parents who had their child benefit stopped by HMRC using incorrect Home Office travel data were not fraudulently claiming the support from abroad, it has emerged.The scale of the government’s anti-fraud fiasco is four times higher than previously admitted, with 15,000 of the 23,500 parents targeted by HMRC now identified as legitimate beneficiaries living in the UK.It means 63% of parents targeted in the anti-fraud debacle first reported by the Detail and the Guardian were legitimate claimants.The government’s admission was revealed in a written answer to a parliamentary question tabled by the Conservative MP for Fylde, Andrew Snowden.Dan Tomlinson, the exchequer secretary to the Treasury, told Snowden in his written answer that figures revealed that, as of 30 November, 14,994 of the 23,794 cases where benefit had been suspended had since “been confirmed to be eligible to child benefit”