<
>
Player of the Match
Player of the Match

For Australia, 'tis the season to be jolly

play
I have my own way of doing things - Root (0:55)

Joe Root disagrees with Ricky Ponting after the former Australia captain described him as a "little boy" during England's Ashes defeat (0:55)

Big Picture

Seasons don't come much more festive for Australia than this 2017-18 summer. The Ashes are once again theirs. They lead the series 3-0 and can dream of a whitewash - another whitewash - against an England side that has disappointed in almost every way. For Steven Smith and his men, 'tis the season to be jolly and the most wonderful time of the year all rolled into one.

The question now is how they maintain their dominance in a dead rubber. Theoretically, it should not be difficult. A continuation of Smith's prodigious run-scoring would go a long way towards 4-0, and the MCG is a venue that Smith enjoys. Smith has now captained Australia in three Boxing Day Tests and in the first innings of those matches he has made 192, 134* and 165*, for a first-innings average of 491 as Test captain at the MCG. And the way he has batted in this series, you wouldn't put it past him to make 491 this time around.

For England, the challenge is rebuilding from the wreckage of their broken tour. They can forget about the Ghosts of Christmas Present and Yet To Come, but a visit from the Ghost of Christmas Past might steer them in the right direction. Specifically, the Ghost of Christmas 1998. In that year, they arrived at the MCG with the Ashes already retained by Australia; the wheels, Nasser Hussain has said, were definitely off the England tour by that stage. Yet through an Alec Stewart hundred and big hauls from Darren Gough and Dean Headley, they found a way to bounce back and secure a memorable win. Such bounce for England now would be of the dead-cat variety, but they would take it all the same.

It is easier said than done, though. England will walk out at the MCG with many questions still unanswered. Is Alastair Cook's slump temporary or something more terminal? Ditto Stuart Broad? Can Moeen Ali continue to carry the spin load? How will their bowling depth perform in the absence of Craig Overton? And most importantly, what sort of Christmas miracle can prevent them going 0-4 down in the series?

Form guide

Australia WWWWL (last five matches, most recent first)
England LLLWL

In the spotlight

What more can be said about Steven Smith? In Perth, he became just the second man in Test history to score 1000 runs in four consecutive calendar years. He will likely be Test cricket's top run scorer in 2017, needing just 14 runs in this Test to pass Cheteshwar Pujara (although Dean Elgar is also in the running, with a Boxing Day Test against Zimbabwe up his sleeve). He averages 74.00 as Test captain, second only to Don Bradman among regular skippers worldwide. And the ICC's historical batting rankings tell us Smith is now equal second (with Jack Hobbs) to Bradman for the highest-ever batting rating. And his MCG record, as mentioned above, is phenomenal. If you are Australian, just sit back and appreciate what you are witnessing. Even if you're not Australian, do it anyway.

It feels as though Alastair Cook has been around forever, probably because England haven't played a Test without him since March 2006. He is far from an old man - in fact, today is his 33rd birthday - but is at an age where a dip in form inevitably leads to questions of cricketing longevity. And while it is true that Cook has failed to pass 40 in his past 10 Test innings, it is also true that his last innings before that was 243, and he averages 34.47 this year. It is also the case that this is not Cook's first slump - he averaged 33.92 in 2013 and then 32.50 in 2014, before bouncing back in 2015, averaging 54.56. Write off a player of his quality at your peril.

Team news

Mitchell Starc will miss the Test due to a bruised heel and will be replaced by Jackson Bird. It will be Bird's first Test since Boxing Day last year, and just his ninth overall in a five-year Test career.

Australia: 1 Cameron Bancroft, 2 David Warner, 3 Usman Khawaja, 4 Steven Smith (capt), 5 Shaun Marsh, 6 Mitchell Marsh, 7 Tim Paine (wk), 8 Pat Cummins, 9 Josh Hazlewood, 10 Nathan Lyon, 11 Jackson Bird.

England have also lost a fast bowler to injury. Craig Overton, who has impressed in his first two Test appearances, has a fractured rib and will be replaced by Surrey seamer Tom Curran, who will become the first England player to debut in a Boxing Day Test since wicketkeeper Warren Hegg in 1998.

England: 1 Alastair Cook, 2 Mark Stoneman, 3 James Vince, 4 Joe Root (capt), 5 Dawid Malan, 6 Jonny Bairstow (wk), 7 Moeen Ali, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Tom Curran, 10 Stuart Broad 11 James Anderson

Pitch and conditions

There are often plenty of runs available on the MCG drop-in pitches. The forecast for the first two days is for hot and sunny weather, but there is the chance of rain over the final three days.

Stats and trivia

  • The last team to beat Australia in a Boxing Day Test was England in 2010-11, when Australia were bowled out for 98 in the first innings and lost by an innings and 57 runs

  • Stuart Broad is (still) seven wickets away from becoming the second England player (James Anderson is the other) to take 400 in Tests

  • Pat Cummins remains so raw in long-form cricket that he has never played a first-class match at the MCG

  • Mitchell Starc has made a habit of missing Boxing Day Tests: since his Test debut in December 2011, he has played only one Melbourne Test (last year against Pakistan)

  • A table in the Sunday Times calculated that England's tail-enders - James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Jake Ball - have received a combined total of 73 bouncers in 93 balls.

Quotes

"It's quite humorous actually, they haven't taken 20 wickets in the series and we have, and they're having a crack at our depth."
Mitchell Starc will not play at the MCG, but he is more confident than England that Jackson Bird can step up as his replacement.

"The way he goes about his business shows he has got what it takes to be a great England captain."
Chris Woakes, England's allrounder, defends his captain Joe Root after Root was described by Ricky Ponting as resembling a "little boy" during England's Ashes defeat.

  • MCG pitch rated poor by ICC

    Australian cricket has been embarrassed by the ICC rating the MCG drop-in pitch for the Boxing Day Ashes Test as "poor" following a dull draw in which only 24 wickets were taken over five days

  • 'It's a shame it's taken until now' - Root

    There was no victory for England, but Joe Root could at least take consolation from a side that had finally competed with Australia

  • Warner tames the beast within (almost)

    There was little in David Warner's career history to suggest he could bat Australia to a draw on a slow pitch - but he has long proved he is more than a six-hitting circus act

  • Relentless Smith finds a fresh ally

    Steven Smith gave praise for his partner on the fifth day at the MCG, as Mitchell Marsh slipped into a supporting role with a mature, unbeaten innings

  • Smith continues his prolific run

    Steven Smith hit yet another hundred - the 23rd of his Test career - to ensure a draw in the Boxing Day Test

23rd in quick time

110

Numer of innings Steven Smith has taken to hit 23 Test hundreds. Only Bradman (59 inns) and Gavaskar (109) were quicker.

Record breaking Cook

1997

Last instance of a player from England carrying his bat before Cook - Atherton scored 94 against New Zealand. Cook's 244 is the highest score ever made by a batsman carrying his bat through a Test innings

Cook Marches on

11

150 plus scores for Cook in Tests - Most for a batsmen from England. He now has three such scores in Australia as well. Only Wally Hammond has more.

Centurion

32

Hundreds for Cook in Tests - joint seventh along with Steve Waugh. During the innings, Cook also went past Jayawardene's tally of 11814 Test runs.

Cook Down Under

5

Centuries for Cook in Australia. He now has centuries in each of the five big venues in Aus. Cook is the fifth player from England to score 5 or more centuries vs Aus in Australia

Cook comes good

10

Innings since Cook's last half-century. His previous score of fifty plus resulted in a score of 243 against West Indies

100 for Anderson

8

Bowlers from England to take 100 or more wickets against Australia. Anderson joined 4 other fast bowlers to this feat.

Centurion Warner

21

Test hundreds for David Warner- 15 of them have come at home. This is his third century against England and second at MCG.

Wonderful Warner

6000

Test Runs for David Warner in 129 innings- Joint fourth fastest for Australia after Bradman, Ponting, Hayden and Greg Chappel.