Stuart Broad’s cheeky ploy at the Oval produced a dramatic reversal in fortunes for England in the fifth Ashes Test against Australia and has explained exactly why he did it
Stuart Broad rattled the Aussies with a touch of gamesmanship as another Ashes battle erupted into great bails of fire.
England’s most successful bowler against Australia â 151 wickets and rising â got under key batsman Marnus Labuschagne’s skin by switching the the bails on his stumps to bring a change of luck after a barren 90 minutes of frustration before lunch.
From Mark Wood’s very next ball, Joe Root held a brilliant one-handed catch at slip to end Labuschagne’s painful go-slow as Australia reahed 295 all out, a slender 12-run lead, in the final Ashes Test. And in a controversial run-out incident, top scorer Steve Smith (71) escaped by the skin of his teeth when England wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow was adjudged to have dislodged a bail before collecting sub fielder George Ealham’s throw.
On the ground where 141 years of Ashes rivalry was born by burning a set of bails, Broad revealed his ploy worked a treat. He explained: “I’ve heard, and I might have made this up, that it’s an Aussie change-of-luck thing, and I think I’ve seen Nathan Lyon do it.