Ben Stokes vows to stay on as captain as Brendon McCullum admits Ashes preparation ‘didn’t work’
England lost the third Test in Adelaide and face the prospect of a series whitewash, with head coach Brendon McCullum expressing regret over how the team prepared for the series
England captain Ben Stokes said defeat in the Ashes “hurts” and “sucks” but vowed to fight on as captain despite a dispiriting first three Tests in Australia.
Australia sealed an 82-run victory on the final day of the third Test in Adelaide, the first time England have taken a Test into its fifth day so far this series.
The comprehensive nature of their victory has piled pressure on Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum and the ‘Bazball’ philosophy, with England now bidding to avoid a 5-0 whiteash and end a winless run in Australia of 18 Tests.
“It hurts and it sucks. It’s very disappointing knowing that we can’t achieve what we set out to do here,” a disconsolate Stokes said afterwards.
“It’s a pretty emotional time for me in the dressing room and for the guys, players, management, backroom stuff. I hate living in hindsight because you can never change what you have done… it’s what you do out there that counts and we’ve not been able to stand up to what Australia have thrown at us.
“We’ve not been able to stand up to the barrage of execution from Australia. But we still have two games left in the series and a hell of a lot to play for, as individuals and as a team.
“We’re not going to turn around and kick the stumps over because we have so much more to play for.”
At 34 years old and with serious wear and tear on his body, Stokes is highly unlikely to be around when England next visit these parts in four years. But he is centrally contracted for the next 18 months meaning one last chance to reclaim the Ashes urn for his country on home soil in 2027.
Asked if he had the energy and desire to continue leading the team, he offered one word: “Absolutely.”
Head coach Brendon McCullum has admitted for the first time that mistakes in England’s Ashes preparations played a part in his side’s downfall.
They have been criticised for taking the build-up period too lightly – be it a solitary warm-up against the England Lions on a slow pitch, their refusal to take up a day-night practice match before the floodlit second Test or their mid-series beach break to Noosa – with a string of former England captains among those to have their say.
Having previously deflected that scrutiny, notably saying his side had “overprepared” for the second Test, McCullum changed his tune and accepted his share of the blame.
“You look back on some things as a coach, of course you do, and ultimately you are responsible for how you get your side ready and how you prepare them,” he said.
“I had conviction, we had conviction, in our methods – not just leading into the first Test but also in between Tests. I look back now and think, ‘did we need more leading into the first and did we need less leading into the second?’.
“They are the changes you look back on over time and say would I do it differently? Retrospectively, we’ve lost 3-0 so you would probably say there was room for change there.
“Again, you put your hand up as a coach and say you might not have got that right. At the time I felt it would give us our best chance because it has previously. But sitting here 3-0, it didn’t work.”



Bookmark popover
Removed from bookmarks