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Head racked up an incredible innings of 123 as Australia roared back to crush England in the opening Ashes test
Joel Dubber,Mitch PhillipsSaturday 22 November 2025 11:34 GMTComments
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England captain Ben Stokes declared himself shell-shocked by Travis Head's incredible innings of 123 as Australia, seemingly on the ropes, roared back to crush England by eight wickets in the opening Ashes Test.
Predictably, he declined to criticise his own side's batting approach after a second consecutive collapse triggered by a series of loose, early shots by the team's elite operators.
England were in a strong-looking position with a lead of 105 with one wicket down just after lunch, but lost nine wickets for 99 and needed late runs from bowlers Gus Atkinson and Brydon Carse to even make that, setting Australia a target of 205.
Stand-in opener Head then hit the second-fastest century in Ashes history en route to 123 and Marnus Labuschagne was unbeaten on 51 as Australia raced to their target in 28.2 overs.
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"Little bit shell-shocked there," Stokes said. "That innings from Travis Head was pretty phenomenal. It's quite raw, quite fresh at the moment. But sheesh, that was some knock."
Although Head's performance was incredible, England's post-lunch batting collapse - for the second day running - will be the focus of much of the post-mortem.
Many observers had questioned England's preparation - just one internal match against the England Lions on a pitch much slower than in Perth - and their top order looked predictably awkward in dealing with pacey, good length balls on Saturday.
After opener Zak Crawley made a second duck in two days, Ollie Pope, Joe Root and Harry Brook all fell to expansive drives, the latter two having barely put bat on ball, just as half the team had done on Friday.
Australia's bowling was accurate and disciplined but the ball was not moving wildly and England's total lack of even a hint of patience was repeatedly exposed.
Travis Head eased Australia to victory with a stunning innings (PA Wire)However, Stokes, who at least tried to play some defensive shots before falling for two, was in no mood to criticise.
"It's pretty obvious that the guys who managed to find success out there were the ones who were really brave, who really decided to take the game on because there was a lot happening out there," he said.
"If you’re the guy who's managed to get in, try and give yourself the best chance of going on. But as we saw, anyone who tried to occupy the crease didn't have much success.
"You have to find ways of scoring runs on wickets that offer a lot for the bowlers. The way in which the 19 wickets fell on day one - we were more proactive with our approach and we managed to come away with a 50-run lead.
"It would have been nice to have a bigger lead but we were confident about our ability to keep Australia to under 200. But it wasn't the case."
Reuters
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