Nobody can cope with England at their best, says veteran pacer James Anderson

England veteran pacer James Anderson said that Australia will not be able to cope with England at their very best when they play the prestigious Ashes series, starting from June 16.

Anderson said that they might have to do something different with Australia, but the England team under the leadership of skipper Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum has been able to cope with everything so far. “I am sure we will have to do something slightly differently against Australia because they might have different plays and whatever else. But we have coped with everything that’s been thrown at us so far. It has been exciting,” said Anderson as quoted by ESPNCricinfo.

“They are naturally extremely competitive, aggressive when they play. They will have discussed it and have their own plans and own ways of how they are going to cope with it. I just think if we do what we have been doing and play as well as we possibly can, I do not think anyone in the world can cope with it,” added the bowler.

Going to play his 10th Ashes series, Test cricket’s third-highest wicket-taker is confident that England can take the urn from Australia for the first time ever since 2015 with their domineering gameplay which has helped them win 10 out of their last 12 matches under Stokes-McCullum.

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“If you look at our team, if we play to the best of our ability with that mindset, I do not think anyone can cope with us. So yes, I think we can win. I feel like if we can keep the same mentality and the same sort of feeling in the dressing room we have had. It is fairly relaxed, we are trying to enjoy ourselves, we are trying to entertain people, take the positive option,” said Anderson.

In many respects, Australia will be the litmus test for many of the values that England has adopted since the beginning of last summer. A drive to entertain, rather than judging performance purely on winning and losing.

So far, England’s mentality has only been called into question once, when they were defeated by New Zealand in Wellington. They had dominated the second Test for the first three days, forcing the Blackcaps to follow on before succumbing by a single run late in the fourth day. Anderson was the last wicket.

Given the passion of the Ashes, will such generosity fly this summer? Stokes told Sky Sports that if England only needed a draw to win the series, he would declare to give Australia a chase in the last Test at the Oval. Anderson hopes that, in light of Stokes’ words, the attitude and mindset continue at their peak. Especially given the link between playing fearlessly and producing remarkable results.

“We are going to get the same messaging from Brendon and Ben about how we go about playing. I think there will just be a little bit more attention around it because it is an Ashes series. But I just hope we can play the same way because it has been brilliant to be part of,” said Anderson.

“I am excited by the way we’ve been playing, it is about something greater than the outcome. It is about entertaining people and trying to enjoy ourselves while we do it. The end result has been taken away to an extent in the last few months, and I think that focus on ourselves has helped produce performances and produce results,” added the bowler.

Anderson is recovering from a minor groin strain suffered last week during Lancashire’s County Championship encounter against Somerset. While the 40-year-old intends to be totally fit for the Ireland Test at Lord’s on June 1, he will most likely sit out that match to prepare for the Ashes, which begin on June 16 at Edgbaston.

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Anderson stated that “three or four out of five would be more realistic than five” with those five Tests against Australia spread out over six weeks. It corresponds to Ben Stokes’ prediction that the hosts will need to call on eight seamers this summer. The skipper will have four options for Ireland, with fast Mark Wood likely to sit out the Test with Anderson.

Australia is sort of a last frontier. Victories over New Zealand, India, and South Africa, as well as a 3-0 series win in Pakistan, have seen them outperform all contenders thus far. While a trip to India in early 2024 will provide an intriguing opportunity to assess how an experimental batting style transfers to turning surfaces, this summer’s visiting attack — the best in the world right now – will provide the most severe resistance thus far.

Anderson’s recent home Ashes experiences have not been particularly positive, especially during a period when England has not lost a series on these shores since 2003. He strained his calf on the morning of the opening match of the 2019 season (2-2), and he pulled up during the third Test of the 2015 series, which England won 3-1. One can see why he wants to avoid injury by avoiding the Ireland game.

There were two 4-0 away defeats in between (2017-18 and 2021-22), as well as a 5-0 setback six months following the home triumph in 2013, it was Anderson’s second whitewash that came following a three-appearance tour in 2006-07.”For me, I have voided the last three away. Four out of five, I think,” said Anderson.

Indeed, Anderson was dropped alongside Broad in the most recent debacle in Australia. When Stokes took over as captain, his first item of business was to recall them.

Since then, Anderson has found a fresh lease on life under a skipper who is more concerned with taking wickets than with sustaining run rates. Though the batting has received the most attention, England has taken the full 20 wickets in all of Stokes’ 12 Tests. Anderson, on the other hand, has 45 dismissals at 17.62, putting him just 15 dismissals shy of the 700 mark.

“I am not trying to just bowl into the channel and get him to leave then hope he prods at one in 16 overs time. I am trying to get a wicket every ball. It might sound strange, the whole point of cricket is to get people out as a bowler, but there are different ways of going about it.”

“I love it. I think it is great. I’ve gone from potentially bowling 35 overs in an innings, potentially trying to winkle a few out, to just giving it everything in your spell knowing we are on. There is a better feel, everyone is involved and there are ideas coming from everyone,” added the pacer. Anderson rates Stokes as the best skipper among the eight skippers he has played under during his two-decade-long international cricket career.

“Yeah,” Anderson on if Stokes was the best.”

It is hard to say over a short period of time but he has had an amazing start. I think he is completely different from any captain I have ever played with before and I have really enjoyed it. I cannot fault anything really. I think everyone knew that he was a leader, the way he trains, whether it is the gym or whether it is catching or batting or bowling the way he goes about his business, he is the ultimate professional. The way he plays he leaves everything out there. So he is a born leader.”

“For me, it is the finer details, not just on the field where his tactical nous has been spot on, but also his emotional intelligence off the field and how he talks to everyone in the group. If he needs to put his arm around someone or fire someone up, he has just got a really good way of doing that. And the way he speaks to the group as well is excellent. I have been really impressed,” concluded the pacer.

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In the 1930s, these women brought hope and rivalry back to Australia’s oldest sporting relationship


Thousands of spectators, a six-week boat voyage and baggy skorts marked the start of women’s international test cricket as we know it.

Australia in the 1930s was in the grip of the Great Depression, and a controversial bowling technique in the men’s Ashes, known as the “bodyline series”, saw sporting relations between Australia and England plummet to an all-time low.

“Australia was dealing with trade tariff protections, they borrowed a lot of money from England during the Depression and a lot of people were saying, ‘Well, let’s not pay that back,’ said author Marion Stell.

So, when a group of women from all walks of life in Australia was asked to play in the inaugural Test cricket series against England in the summer of 1934, they brought hope of mending the fractured relationship.

Marion Stell says the 1930s was a strong time for women in sport.(Supplied: National Museum of Australia)

It’s a legacy Dr Stell, from Toowoomba in southern Queensland, unearthed 30 years ago when she began research for her book The Bodyline Fix and tracked down members of the founding team.

“A lot of women, a lot of factory women, a lot of professional women were playing it [cricket],” Dr Stell said.

“The 1930s was a very strong period in sport for women, most of the team sports got established, the national team organisations got established.

“I think there were more than a million women in Australia playing sport.”

Dr Stell said by the time the inaugural series began, women’s cricket in Australia had been booming for decades, since the first official game recorded in 1855 in Bendigo, Victoria.

Lost in history

Sir Donald “The Don” Bradman is widely acknowledged as the greatest batsman of all time, but less attention has been paid to his talented mother, Emily Whatman.

In the 1890s, Ms Whatman played in a strong intercolonial cricket competition between the main states.

“We tend to know the story of Bradman hitting the golf ball with the stump against the family water tank,” Dr Stell said.

“But in fact, his mother, Emily Whatman, bowled to him her left-arm seamers every afternoon after school.”

A black and white collage of images of women getting dressed for cricket and cricket shoes.
Women gearing up for the game.(Supplied: National Museum of Australia)

It was the formation of the Australian Women’s Cricket Council in 1931 that cemented the sport and established a large interstate competition that proved very popular.

“They would have thousands of spectators at them, and the men would come along, and they’d have their own heroines, and they’d bet on the game,” Dr Stell said.

But test matches against England remained the priority, and when the English players arrived in Brisbane in the summer of 1934, the six-week boat trip and their larger nationwide competition proved an advantage for the visitors.

Australia failed to win a game, but then returned the favour during the tour of England in 1937, when Australia won its first five games in a row.

A collage of black and white images of a group of women on a boat.
When the Australian team travelled to England in 1937, they won five games in a row. (Supplied: National Museum of Australia)

Despite the success and growth of the women’s game, it ground to a halt during World War II.

England’s tour of Australia in 1939/40 was cancelled, and it wasn’t until 1948 that they returned.

“[After World War II], women were asked to go back to the home, away from employment and back into childbearing and so we reverted back to the position of women that we traditionally know from those times,” Dr Stell said.

“What you gain in one generation, you don’t necessarily hold onto the next.”

A game of growth

A collage of a woman with a cap on smiling and a woman signing a kids ball.
Grace Harris says the women’s game has come a long way. (ABC Southern Queensland: Anthea Moodie)

When Brisbane Heat and Australian representative Grace Harris reflects on the history of her beloved sport, she can’t help but laugh. 

Standing among a group of young girls who eagerly wait for her signature after a game at a packed Allan Border oval, she knows women’s cricket has come a long way. 

“It’s great to see the young kids that are coming through that can honestly say that if they want to be a professional cricketer then they have the opportunity to become one,” Ms Harris said.

“If I think back to even just playing when I was 17, someone won player of the match and she won an iron. 

“I couldn’t imagine playing at a high performance level in some of the outfits that I’ve seen.”



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