Spin bowling on the back foot with pace dominating quickfire Ashes

A picture


Disappointment can be found in all corners of this Ashes series.England’s victory came too late.Australia may have secured the urn again but Glenn McGrath’s usual prediction didn’t hold.It has been a serious letdown for the neutral, never mind that a 3-2 scoreline is still in the offing.This was meant to be the one where England had a shot, where the Sydney finale would actually have something on the line beyond World Test Championship points.

Instead we’ve had 13 days of play out of 20, star quicks from both sides missing hefty chunks or all of it and stern-faced discussions about how much grass was left on the “G”.It’s fallen well short as a spectacle.Part of that lies in the absence of the slow stuff, a lack of high-quality spin ruining the show.For all the thrill of the quicks, a world-class, thoroughly watchable spinner has held up each chapter of Ashes cricket this century.There was Shane Warne’s alpha-greatness until he tipped his hat to the SCG in 2007.

Graeme Swann was introduced two years later and while his record against Australia, 62 wickets at a touch under 40, is hardly exceptional, his fizz was central to England’s three consecutive series victories.And then, on the same tour that Swann called time, Nathan Lyon took his first Test five-fer in Australia, firming up a spot he’s kept for most of the past 12 years, a period in which his side have been dominant.Lyon’s 55 overs in this series are the only ones bowled by a specialist spinner so far.Left out of the pink-ball match, a decision that left him in a “filthy” mood, he took two top-order wickets in England’s first innings at Adelaide, followed by a gallery piece of bowling in the chase: a yo-yoing off-break that took back Ben Stokes’s off-stump.It was a welcome sight, a mix-up from the churn of seam.

Sadly for Australia’s highest Test wicket-taker after Warne – Lyon overtook McGrath in the same match – he had to celebrate the victory on crutches after injuring his hamstring on the final day.Even if fit and included, Lyon would have been a bystander at Melbourne, just as he was at Perth, just as he was for parts of Australia’s series against India a year ago, bowling seven overs across two Tests in Adelaide and Sydney.He has encountered a harsh reality of late; the 38-year-old is facing conditions at home that have become much friendlier to pace.His colleagues, far too good, are running through teams without his help.“Spin is the easiest thing to face on some of these wickets that are offering a lot of seam,” said Steve Smith after Australia’s defeat at the MCG, where not a single over of spin was bowled.

“It’s almost the point of why would you bowl it when you could leak 30 or 40 runs quickly if they decide to play positively, and the game shifts immediately.I love seeing spinners play a part in the game, but right now why would you?” Now on the way back from surgery, Lyon’s own future is under focus, as is the nature of spin bowling more generally in Australia, its relevance at Test level under question.Uncertainty lingers for English spin, too.Shoaib Bashir has been called the No 1 spinner by his higher-ups yet this has been uttered while discussing his absence, the offie left out when the flat one in Adelaide was screaming for some tweak.Displaced by Will Jacks, a batter who can bowl, Bashir’s returns on this tour have been limited to expensive outings in the Lilac Hill warm-up and against Australia A.

It was a more than reasonable call for England to invest in Bashir last year,A solid start in India was backed up by further success against West Indies at Trent Bridge, the ball ripped down an inviting, attacking line as he celebrated his third Test five-fer in his fifth game,But he was still learning on the job, a 20-year-old who had been a professional cricketer for less than two years, and his threat and control waned when he toured Pakistan and New Zealand,There’s a case that Jack Leach, the safer bet, could have returned as England’s No 1 at the start of 2025, opening up a spot for Bashir at Somerset and allowing the off-spinner to learn his craft away from all the noise,But county cricket is no protective bubble either, with no guarantees of game time for a developing spinner, even one with Test credentials.

In Sydney this weekend the hopes for a gripping off-break may rest on Jacks, giving it his all while going at close to five an over in the series, and Todd Murphy, who has shown promise in his brief Test career but is yet to play a game at home,A three-day finish against India last January at the SCG, with only one wicket falling to spin, is not an encouraging precedent,But here’s hoping there is at least a sliver of assistance for the tweaker, a role to play, something a little more receptive to an art gone astray,
politicsSee all
A picture

Nigel de Gruchy obituary

The trade union leader Nigel de Gruchy, who has died aged 82, always insisted on putting the interests of the teachers he was elected to represent ahead of those of the pupils in the classrooms where they taught. While this approach was both logical and defensible for a trade unionist, it was also one that inevitably provoked controversy.Such an outcome did not normally deter De Gruchy, who relished the prospect of a public ding-dong, recognising that the resultant publicity might quite possibly enhance his chances of success in whatever cause he was then pursuing. It did not make him popular in Westminster or Whitehall, but he won some important political and legal battles that would significantly improve the lives of school teachers.These included, shortly after De Gruchy became general secretary in 1990 of the amalgamated National Association of Schoolmasters/Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT), helping to persuade John Major’s government to establish a teachers’ pay review body

A picture

From Send to single-sex spaces: key tests facing Keir Starmer in 2026

Keir Starmer will begin his second full year in Downing Street as one of the least popular ever prime ministers – a spectacularly rapid reversal from his landslide election win of just 18 months ago.Yet Starmer believes this will be the year things start to improve for his beleaguered premiership and fractious Labour party.His chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, recently told special advisers gathered in Downing Street that 2026 would be “the year of proof” when Labour begins to show voters that the change they voted for in 2024 is being delivered.Starmer will start the year with a speech on the cost of living, flagging recent interest rate cuts and the abolition of levies from energy bills as signs that life is becoming more affordable.But he faces a number of potential pitfalls in the year ahead that could end up defining his premiership

A picture

Badenoch under fire as Tory shadow attorney general acts for Roman Abramovich

Kemi Badenoch is under pressure to act on the revelations that her shadow attorney general is representing the Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, despite UK sanctions against him.David Wolfson, a Tory peer, is part of the legal team representing Abramovich as he attempts to recover billions in frozen assets he owns in the Channel islands.Abramovich is caught up in a legal battle with the government of Jersey after it launched an investigation into the source of more than £5.3bn of assets linked to him and held there.Ministers have said that the case in Jersey is delaying the release of £2

A picture

‘We have to go’: longest-serving lord reflects on looming Labour eviction

At the age of 84, David Trefgarne is not the oldest active peer in the House of Lords. But now well into his 64th year in the upper house, he is very much the longest serving. And in the next few months, it will all end.The 2nd Baron Trefgarne, to use his formal title, is one of the few hereditary peers still helping to make UK law, the tail end of a legislative chain dating back to the 13th century and Magna Carta. When one of these laws, the House of Lords (hereditary peers) bill, receives royal assent some time in the spring, that will be that

A picture

Unite leader tells Labour to ‘stop being embarrassed’ to be voice of workers

Unite’s general secretary, Sharon Graham, has told the government it must do more for workers in 2026 or risk sowing the seeds of its own destruction.Graham accused Labour of being preoccupied with its “failing leadership” and described the debate about who might replace Keir Starmer as inevitable.Writing in the Times, she said: “For too long it has been everyday people, workers and communities who have paid the price for crisis after crisis not of their making. In 2026 this must stop. The government needs to decide what it stands for and who it stands for

A picture

‘Zack is a phenomenal leader’: Siân Berry on the Green party’s next steps as membership doubles

“Someone has to be out there making the narrative for social security. Someone has to fight the corrosive attitudes to people on benefits,” says Siân Berry, who has just finished her first year as a Green MP in the House of Commons.She is speaking to the Guardian in her Brighton constituency office, formerly occupied by the legendary Caroline Lucas who flew a lone flag as the only member of parliament for the Green party for 14 years.Now, however, there are four MPs including Berry, battling together, she says, to hold the space for the left at a moment when it feels the far right has hypnotised the entire political body. “Often Adrian [Ramsay, MP for Waveney Valley] is the only one bringing up animal welfare in Defra questions, or Carla [Denyer, MP for Bristol Central] will be the only person arguing for a refugee’s right to work to the Home Office