McCullum: Crawley’s success in opposition to Australia validates England’s strategy to Test cricket
After 48 and three at Lord’s, he made 44 and 33 in a low-scorer at Headingley, then thrashed 189 off 182 balls in Manchester as England dominated a rain-ruined fourth Test. He completed with 22 and 73 at The Oval, serving to to arrange England’s 49-run win and securing his standing as their main run-scorer for the sequence.
“Coming into the series, he was under quite a lot of pressure,” McCullum mentioned. “The great thing was he was able to block that out as much as possible… you hope that’s down to the environment the skipper’s trying to create, and the sincere messaging.
“480 runs at a strike fee of 90 [88.72], in opposition to the perfect bowling assault on the earth, in opposition to the Dukes ball, in an Ashes sequence: individuals do not do this, you already know? As the skipper mentioned: you take a look at what individuals’s upsides are, what their greatest days are, what they’re able to reaching fairly than specializing in issues that may not be there. He’s a living proof.
“I think we’ve seen someone really grow and mature and really develop over the last six weeks or so. I’m sure he’ll be proud of the series he’s had and won’t get carried away, because that’s the type of personality he is. It’s great – not just for Zak, but also for other guys around the side and around county cricket. They know that when they get the opportunity, they’ll get support.”
“Their contrasting skills – which we’ve talked a lot about leading into the series – is pretty evident and it helps one another,” McCullum mentioned. “Ben Duckett’s turned into a really serious player at the top of the order for us. Away from home as well, his game in sub-continent conditions you’d expect to really flourish, too.”
McCullum mentioned that squaring the sequence from two-nil down – whereas doubling down on their attacking model with the bat – proved the purpose that the strategy he and Stokes have applied will get essentially the most out of England’s gamers. “We have a certain style we try to exhibit every time we play,” he mentioned.
“I think for us, that is our best chance of winning. The skipper and I firmly believe that, and some of the performances we’ve seen… are testament to that. Look, you’re always trying to win, right? You just don’t want to be bogged down in key moments by the result.
“What we are attempting to do is permit ourselves to get in an area in our personal minds the place it permits your expertise to return out. If you are weighed down by concern of failure or by exterior noise, all you are doing is suffocating that expertise. It’s so simple as that. For us, leisure is an enormous a part of it and the way we play is an enormous a part of it. But for positive, we wish to win.”
From one win in 17 when Stokes and McCullum took over, England have won 13 of their 18 Tests under new leadership. “You look again to when the skipper took over and to return in as nicely,” McCullum reflected, “would we be capable of tackle a fantastic Australian crew – and they’re a fantastic Australian crew – and go toe-to-toe with them?
“I think the answer is yes – and that’s a tremendous confidence-booster for the group, but also testament to the investment to all the guys who have really gone quids-in with their belief in this side and the direction the skipper wants it to head. When you go two-nil down in a series and you’ve played some really good cricket, you know there’s going to be some challenges.
“To come again from that and sq. the sequence two-two, each groups might be dissatisfied they do not find yourself strolling away with the scoreline, albeit Australia stroll away with the urn. We stayed true to that beneath the fiercest of stress.”
Matt Roller is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98