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Monday, December 15, 2025 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "Perth" (3 articles)

Australia’s Usman Khawaja reacts as he stretches during a training session in Brisbane Tuesday.
Sport

Weight of history against England in pink-ball Test

England head into Thursday’s day-night second Ashes Test against pink-ball masters Australia needing a rare victory at Brisbane’s Gabba to get back into the five-match series.Travis Head’s whirlwind century as a makeshift opener carried Australia to an eight-wicket victory inside two days in Perth as they went 1-0 up. The hosts are again without captain Pat Cummins and fellow quick Josh Hazlewood, leaving swing king Mitchell Starc, who is expected to be a force in humid Brisbane under lights, to carry the attack. England, who capitulated in four frantic hours in Perth from a winning position, cannot afford to slip 2-0 down with three matches to play if they are to have realistic hopes of regaining the urn. They will be without their own pace spearhead, Mark Wood, who is nursing a knee injury. He was replaced by off-spinner Will Jacks, who will bolster the batting, in an otherwise unchanged team named Tuesday. All-rounder Jacks has played in two previous Tests and claimed a five-wicket haul on debut against Pakistan in 2022. He has mainly been used by England in white-ball cricket. “Everyone knows what a brilliant cricketer he is,” England batsman and Jacks’ Surrey team-mate Ollie Pope told reporters. “The way he’s grown over the last few years, we’ve seen his white-ball game really go forward. It’s a great opportunity for his red-ball, too. “He’s obviously got that style of spin bowling where he can get some bounce and turn off the pitch, then everyone has seen the skills he’s got in the white-ball format. “He can take on a really good attack.” Captain Ben Stokes says England have moved on from Perth and are not scarred by past results but they face a formidable weight of history in Brisbane, where they have been holding extra training sessions this week. England have not won a Test in Australia since their 2010-11 tour, losing 14 and drawing two. Moreover, they have not triumphed at the Gabba for 39 years and have lost all three previous day-nighters against the hosts. Day-night specialists Australia thrive under lights, winning 13 of the 14 pink-ball Tests they have played worldwide, but England will take encouragement from the sole defeat coming at the Gabba against the West Indies a year ago. “On an evening it does seem to do a little bit more, especially if you have a slightly newer ball,” said England fast bowler Brydon Carse after a night session in the nets Tuesday.Steve Smith captains Australia, who must decide how to fill the opening slot vacated by Usman Khawaja who was ruled out Tuesday after failing to recover from back spasms suffered in Perth. “Khawaja will remain with the team to continue his rehabilitation. He has not been replaced in the squad,” said Cricket Australia. Khawaja batted for 30 minutes in the practice nets Tuesday evening but the left-hander appeared to be in discomfort. Head is likely to again move up alongside Jake Weatherald, with seaming all-rounder Beau Webster coming into the side at number six with Cameron Green moving up to five.Paceman Scott Boland had sympathy for Khawaja. “It’s hard because he’s put in a lot of work since the last game just trying to get his body right but he hasn’t come up, unfortunately,” Boland told reporters. “I thought he looked pretty good in the nets, but he must have thought in himself that he wasn’t ready to go.” Marnus Labuschagne filled in as an opener for Khawaja in the first innings at Perth. “It’s just game-by-game, and you work out what’s your best team and how does it best work for the game,” said Labuschagne. Australia also have the option of bringing in Josh Inglis to open, leaving Head at number five where he would not have to face a new pink ball under lights. Head, who stunned England with a match-winning 123 from 83 balls, said he would be ready to move up again, adding that fixed batting orders were “slightly overrated”. “The traditionalists will say that’s how it’s got to be,” Head said. “It’s ever evolving and we’ll see where we get to. I feel I can play in any role.” SQUADS Australia: Steve Smith (capt), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster England: Ben Duckett, Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (captain), Jamie Smith, Will Jacks, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Jofra Archer. 

England’s Joe Root takes part in a training session in Perth Thursday. (AFP)
Sport

Stokes calls Smith and Root ‘greatest of their generation’

England captain Ben Stokes called Steve Smith and Joe Root the greatest batsmen of their generation Thursday and said keeping the Australian skipper quiet was crucial to winning the Ashes. Ahead of today’s first Test in Perth, Australia’s Smith and England’s Root share 24,020 Test runs between them and 75 centuries.But while Root is yet to score a ton on Australian soil and averages just 35.68, Smith has been potent at home. He averages an ominous 59.70 against England, including 18 hundreds.“Not too much has changed because he (Smith) just gets runs against us, doesn’t he?” Stoke said when asked if he had noticed any weakness to exploit.“That seems to be a constant – a serious player, has been for a very long time.“Him and Joe Root, neck-and-neck in my opinion in terms of the greatest batters of this generation.“You always want to come up with ways to try and keep the best players quiet. And that’s something that obviously we’re going to have to do.It’ll be a hard thing to be able to do,” he added.“But if we can keep Steve Smith, minus all the other guys in the batting order, quiet, then we’ve given ourselves a good chance to achieve in the goal that we want.”Smith will lead Australia for the third time this year in Pat Cummins’ absence when the Ashes get under way.The 36-year-old’s full-time reign as skipper came to an end over the South Africa ball-tampering controversy in 2018, but he has consistently filled in since.Sure to send a scare through the England camp, his average is an incredible 68.98 in his 40 Tests as Australia captain.Smith scored a century for New South Wales last month after not picking up a bat for six weeks, and said he was in a good place.“I’m pretty chilled,” he said. “I think I’ve learned a lot over my journey.“The last couple of times that I’ve stood in for Patty (Cummins) I’ve tried to be pretty relaxed and let the game play.“Obviously I’ve got to do it my own way out there and have my own style. But I’m a lot more relaxed these days, chilled, and you know, let the guys go about their work.”

Former Australian cricket player Greg Chappell (R) and former England player Ian Botham (L) speak after a press conference in Melbourne on November 11, 2025. Cricket Australia announced a 150th Anniversary Day-night Test match between Australia and England will take place at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) from 11-15 March 2027. (AFP)
Sport

Botham concerned about England's Ashes preparations

Former England captain Ian Botham has raised questions about the team's lean Ashes preparations and whether the players will be ready to take on an entire nation backing Australia's bid to retain the urn.England did not have their full squad in Perth until last Sunday and will play one internal match before the series-opener starts in the Western Australian capital on November 21. All but one of Australia's Ashes squad, meanwhile, are warming up with the red ball in domestic Sheffield Shield matches around the country.A number of England's players played white-ball cricket in neighbouring New Zealand before arriving but Botham said touring teams traditionally needed time to adjust to Australian conditions. "It's not the way I would prepare," Botham told reporters in Melbourne Tuesday."I think historically you have to acclimatise when you come down here. You've got to remember there's 24mn people down here, not 11. And you have to take that on board. The ball does seems to get to you quicker (in Perth) and the light's different. You've got the 'Fremantle Doctor'; there's all kinds of things go into the melting pot."Joe Root-captained England played two internal matches against the England Lions before the last 2021/22 Ashes in Australia and lost the series 4-0. Botham expects a better outcome for Ben Stokes's team this time around, as long as they can avoid too many injuries."It's one of those big ifs," the 69-year-old said. "If England's bowlers can stay fit, which doesn't happen very often, and the captain can play a full part then I think England have a got a real chance."Botham said England could consider unleashing a four-prong pace attack against Australia, saying West Indies had done pretty well with a similar strategy in 2024 and split a two-test series 1-1 with Pat Cummins's team. "I think it's the right way. You want to be aggressive, come through and players, if they're not playing very well, don't like it in the ribs," he said. "So, yeah, it'll be interesting."Botham was speaking at a press conference looking ahead to the 150th anniversary Test between Australia and England at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) from March 11-15, 2027. Governing body Cricket Australia is launching a ticket ballot on December 23 for the non-Ashes match, which commemorates the nations' first test in 1877 at the MCG.Australia beat England by 45 runs in the centenary match in 1977 at the stadium, with pace bowler Denis Lillee taking 11 wickets for the hosts and England number three Derek Randall named man of the match after scoring a second-innings 174.Greg Chappell, who captained Australia in the centenary Test, remembered having to "represent" England in back-yard matches against brother Ian, who played as Australia."It's hard to beat 150 years of history," Chappell said alongside Botham. "Sadly, we've been alive for half of it."