It is a contest older than the modern Olympic Games, older by far than football’s World Cup. The Ashes, created in 1882, may not enjoy the global reach of those other great international tournaments but to the participants, two nations with long sporting pedigrees, they represent a biennial journey, interrupted only by baser conflicts, through the peaks and troughs of every conceivable emotion.
Brisbane’s Gabba Stadium was packed on Thursday for the opening day of this latest five-match instalment of the ancient rivalry between England and Australia.
Only two nations with so much shared history could engender a rivalry so deep that it seems to touch and expose their essence, an extension by other means of their intimate but often abrasive relationship — social, political, cultural.
It has been called the most eagerly anticipated cricket series of all time, but the threads of 124 years of combat form an intricately worked background to this meeting between the sides led by Ricky Ponting and Andrew Flintoff. Behind the two captains and their players flit the ghosts of Spofforth, Grace, Trumper, O’Reilly, Larwood, Grimmett, Hobbs, Bradman, Hutton, Miller, Compton, Harvey, Tyson, Benaud, Cowdrey, Simpson, Dexter, the Chappells, Boycott, Marsh, Botham, Lillee, Gatting, the Waughs and countless others, woven into a tale that grows richer with each retelling.
No player privileged to take the field in an Ashes series can be unaware of his place, however insignificant, among the immortals.
For once, however, history recedes into the background. This time there is a more immediate imperative driving the two sides. England’s victory last year, achieved by the skin of their teeth, represented a long-desired rebirth for the mother country and an unexpected reversal for the former colony. Now the host nation is thirsty for revenge while the visitors yearn to prove that their first Ashes success in 18 years was not merely the consequence of propitious circumstances.
And so, once the Australian public got over the shock of hearing that swimmer Ian Thorpe, their number one individual sporting hero of the past 10 years, announced his retirement on Tuesday, they turned their attention to six weeks of cricket that promise another epic narrative. The England squad will not lack for support: this week the advance cadres of the Barmy Army have been setting up camp at the Pig and Whistle pub in Queen Street, downing pints of lager and pan-grilled Moreton Bay bugs under strings of St George’s flag bunting.
You might not think that this Ashes series would need much in the way of hype, but the Aussies have been doing their best to raise the temperature. The arrival of Michael Vaughan at Brisbane airport on Monday inspired claims of a secret England plan to spring him on the Australians, an Achilles emerging from seclusion to answer his army’s despairing call. The Sydney Morning Herald asked: ”Was this part of an elaborate swindle by England coach Duncan Fletcher, known for his wily ways?”
Outside an Elizabeth Street newsagent a billboard shouts: ”Security scare for Poms”. On an inside page of the Brisbane Courier-Mail the story turns out to be about a passenger on England’s flight to Queensland attempting to secure an autograph from Andrew Flintoff en route.
”Weak link” is the banner headline on a story quoting Shane Warne’s suggestion that Geraint Jones, England’s Brisbane-reared batsman-wicketkeeper, is likely to spill enough catches to ensure Australia’s success. ”Will this man drop the Ashes?” another tabloid asks.
Meanwhile Warne (37) and Glenn McGrath (36) promise that a side packed with thirtysomethings will be more than fit enough to humble the Poms. Last time around, even in defeat, Warne was the undisputed man of the series, while the two victories that gave England the Ashes were achieved in McGrath’s absence.
Whatever these two have left in the tank, it will be drained to the last drop.
The hosts, heavy favourites in the betting, fancy their chances of restoring their pre-eminence while England, deprived of Vaughan, Marcus Trescothick and Simon Jones, must overcome the odds.
On the surface the tide appears to be running one way: of their past 12 Test matches Australia have won 11 and drawn the other, while five of England’s last 12 have ended in victory, including Pakistan’s default at The Oval. Subtler undercurrents, however, may play a part. Youth and optimism could give England’s top-order batsmen an advantage.
Ponting described the first day at Lords in the most recent series as the most intense he had ever experienced. It ended with Australia 190 all out, England 92/7 and five wickets apiece for McGrath and Steve Harmison. Never had so many conflicting signals been sent out in a single day’s cricket. You would not want to bet against something to match during this series. — Â