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England vs India in numbers

No matter what the sport, England teams seem to specialise in being good but not quite good enough. In my lifeftime, I can count the number of times that England can justifiably claim to be top dogs rather than underdogs on the fingers of one hand. Having been born four years after England’s football World Cup triumph, there is the 2003 rugby union World Cup and the 2010 cricket World Twenty20. And that, as far as the major team sports are concerned, is that. Britain has had – and continues to boast – its fair share of world/Olympic champions and world-class practitioners in individual events: Sebastian Coe, Daley Thompson, Jessica Ennis, Ben Ainslie, Lennox Lewis, Nigel Mansell, Chris Hoy and Mark Cavendish to name but a few. But when it comes to putting eleven (or six, or 15, or whatever other number) athletes together against the league of nations, the cupboard has remained steadfastly bare.

However, England’s remarkable 12-month rise from fifth to first in the Test rankings was confirmed with victory at Edgbaston two weeks ago and underlined emphatically with a second successive innings victory at The Oval yesterday, completing a 4-0 whitewash over the former world leaders India. Defending that top ranking will be difficult – indeed South Africa have the opportunity to jump into top spot before England before play again in Sri Lanka next March – but that does not diminish the cause for celebration or the pride I feel in a team which for so many years has wallowed in mediocrity (and sometimes worse).

Here is the story of how England displaced India as the number one Test side in the world – in numbers. (For a more comprehensive view on what this series win means to England cricket fans, read Chris’s post here.)

The series in numbers

First Test, Lord’s (July 21st-25th): England 474/8 dec (Pietersen 202*, Kumar 5/106) & 269/6 dec (Prior 103*, Sharma 4/59) beat India 286 (Dravid 103, Broad 4/37) & 261 (Raina 78, Anderson 5/65) by 196 runs.

Second Test, Trent Bridge (July 29th-August 1st): England 221 (Broad 64, Kumar 3/45) and 544 (Bell 159, Kumar 4/124) beat India 288 (Dravid 117, Broad 6/46) & 158 (Tendulkar 56, Bresnan 5/48) by 319 runs.

Third Test, Edgbaston (August 10th-13th): England 710/7 dec (Cook 294, Morgan 104) beat India 224 (Dhoni 74, Broad 4/53, Bresnan 4/62) & 244 (Dhoni 74*, Anderson 4/85) by an innings and 242 runs.

Fourth Test, The Oval (August 18th-22nd): England 591/6 dec (Bell 235, Pietersen 175) beat India 300 (Dravid 146) & 283 (Tendulkar 91, Swann 6/106) by an innings and 8 runs.

The teams in numbers

4 – England posted the four highest innings totals in the series, passing 450 on each occasion.

1 – Conversely, India scored 300 only once in their eight innings – recording exactly 300 in the opening innings of the final Test, after which they were still forced to follow on.

710 – Highest innings score (for 7 declared), by England in the 3rd Test at Edgbaston. It was their third-highest Test total ever, and their highest against India.

158 – Lowest innings total, by India in the 2nd Test at Trent Bridge.

80 – England claimed all 80 Indian wickets during the series, versus just 47 for India.

2 – Number of times which India bowled England out (in both innings at Trent Bridge). England declared four times and only needed their second innings twice.

3 – India‘s margin of defeat in the third Test (an innings and 242 runs) was their third-worst ever.

Batting in numbers

Pietersen was the leading batsman in the series

6- Despite batting two times fewer (six innings versus eight), England had seven of the top ten run-scorers in the series.

5 – England batsmen posted the five highest individual scores of the series – one by Alastair Cook, and two each by Kevin Pietersen and Ian Bell. All three recorded double centuries.

533 - Pietersen was the leading run-scorer in the series, with 533 runs at an average of 106.60.

294Cook had the highest individual score of the series, 294 at Edgbaston. As a team, India exceeded this total just once.

461 - Rahul Dravid was India’s top batsman with 461 runs, at an average of 76.83.

Dravid was India's only centurion, scoring a series-leading three

3Dravid was India’s only century-maker, registering tons in the first, third and fourth Tests.

3 – Dravid also became only the third Indian batsman to carry his bat in a Test innings (after Sunil Gavaskar and Sachin Tendulkar), scoring an unbeaten 146 in India’s first innings at The Oval. He had to come straight back out again as England enforced the follow-on.

7 – England batsmen recorded seven centuries to India’s three.

3 – Number of England batsmen who scored at least 300 runs in the series (Pietersen, Bell, Cook) versus just one for India (Dravid).

8 – Number of batsmen who averaged 40 or more in the series. With the exception of Dravid, all were English.

350 - The third wicket stand of 350 between Bell and Pietersen at The Oval was the highest partnership of the series.

12 - There were 12 century partnerships during the series, 10 of them by English batsmen.

34.12 – Batting average of Sachin Tendulkar, well below his career average of 56.25. He fell nine runs short of what would have been his 100th international century at The Oval.

59.76 – England’s average runs per wicket during the series, more than double India’s average of 25.55.

70 - Pietersen scored more boundaries than any other batsman in the series (68 fours, two sixes).

3 - Eoin Morgan was dismissed for a third-ball duck in England’s first innings of both the first and second Tests. He made up for it by scoring a century in the first innings of the third Test, however.

2 – Virender Sehwag recorded a king pair at Edgbaston – out first ball in both innings.

Bowling in numbers

Broad was the top wicket-taker and also claimed a hat-trick

25 – Number of wickets taken by Stuart Broad, the most on either side, and ten more than the leading Indian Praveen Kumar. (Broad also added 182 runs with the bat.)

6 – Number of bowlers who took 10 or more wickets in the series. Four were English, including the top two wicket-takers, Broad and Tim Bresnan (16).

5 – Number of times a bowler took at least five wickets in an innings. Four of these were by an English bowler (Broad, Bresnan, Jimmy Anderson, Graeme Swann).

2 – Bowlers captured six wickets in a single innings on two occasions, both Englishmen: Broad and Swann.

Kumar averaged better than a wicket every five overs

1 – Hat-tricks in the series, by Broad at Trent Bridge. It was the first time a bowler has ever taken a hat-trick in a Test against India.

29.5Kumar took a wicket every 29.5 balls, the best strike rate among regular bowlers in the series. Bresnan and Broad were not far behind, with impressive strike rates of a wicket every 34.3 and 36.3 balls respectively.

3 – Three of England’s bowlers (Bresnan, Broad, Anderson) averaged fewer than 30 runs per wicket. Only one Indian (Kumar) did.

58.18 – Other than Kumar, among India’s specialist bowlers Ishant Sharma had the second-best bowling average – his 11 wickets cost a whopping 58.18 runs apiece.

143.5Harbhajan Singh, for so long India’s primary spin threat, took just two wickets in his two matches at an average of 143.5.

And finally, a few other numbers

Prior took 16 catches and added a hundred with the bat

1 – England are now the number one country in Test cricket.

5 – England’s ranking 12 months ago.

17 – England wicketkeeper Matt Prior claimed 17 dismissals in the series (16 catches, one stumping). His counterpart M S Dhoni took 13 catches.

5Cook and Andrew Strauss led among other fielders with five catches each.

11 – India have now lost 11 out of 16 Tests at Lord’s.

7 – England’s 4-0 victory marks only the seventh time in their history they have won a series by four matches or more.

6 – This was India’s sixth series defeat by four or more matches, and their first since their tour of Australia in 1991/92.


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The week in numbers: w/e 30/1/11

15Barcelona‘s 3-0 win over Hércules was their 15th consecutive victory in La Liga, tying the Spanish league record held by Real Madrid.

1 – This was the first time in the Open era that both the number one (Caroline Wozniacki) and two (Vera Zvonareva) seeds were knocked out in the Australian Open semi-finals.

Clijsters won her fourth Grand Slam singles title

4Kim Clijsters defeated Li Na to win her fourth Grand Slam singles title – her first outside the US Open.

7Andy Murray became the sixth British male finalist since Fred Perry‘s US Open win in 1936 to reach a Grand Slam final and lose: Henry ‘Bunny’ Austin (French 1937, Wimbledon 1938), John Lloyd (Australia 1977), Greg Rusedski (US 1997) and Murray himself (US 2008, Australia 2010, Australia 2011).

3 - Murray becomes the first male player ever to lose his first three Grand Slam finals in straight sets, as he succumbed to Novak Djokovic 6-4 6-2 6-3.

2Alberto Contador stands to be the second Tour de France winner in the last five years to be stripped of his title, after the Spanish cycling federation proposed a 12-month ban for a positive drugs test at July’s Tour.

102Jonathan Trott scored 102 off 126 balls as England won the fourth one-day international against Australia by 21 runs.

53Steven Finn and Jimmy Anderson set a record England tenth wicket partnership in one-day matches of 53, but England still lost the fifth ODI yesterday, giving Australia an unassailable 4-1 series lead.

7 – Paralympic runner Oscar Pistorius was beaten over 100 metres for the first time in seven years at the IPC athletics world championships in Christchurch, New Zealand. He finished 0.03s behind the USA’s Jerome Singleton.

The FA Cup 4th round in numbers

4Aston Villa have now beaten Blackburn in four domestic cup ties in the past two seasons. Their 3-1 win meant they have knocked Rovers out of the Carling Cup and the FA Cup both this and last season.

6Crawley Town, who won 1-0 at Torquay United, became only the sixth non-league club since World War II to reach the fifth round, and the first since Kidderminster Harriers in 1994.

1Wolves‘ 1-0 defeat marked the first time (in seven attempts) they have ever been knocked out of the Cup by Stoke.

0 – After their 2-1 home defeat to Manchester United, Southampton have now won none of their eight home FA Cup matches against United (four draws, four defeats).

8Hereford United‘s 4-1 defeat at Sheffield Wednesday means they have reached the fourth round eight times in their history, and lost on each occasion.

30Arsenal‘s 2-1 victory over Huddersfield Town meant they became only the second club ever to go 30 home matches unbeaten in the FA Cup. Sheffield Wednesday were the first (1923-1947).

24 – Arsenal have lost none of their 24 FA Cup ties against lower division opposition under Arsène Wenger.

1 – Their 4-0 defeat at Fulham means that 2011 is the first time since 1951 that Tottenham Hotspur have failed to reach at least the 5th round of the FA Cup in a year ending in ’1′.

0 – Total cost (in transfer fees) of Notts County‘s starting XI in their 1-1 draw with Manchester City – nine free transfers and two loanees.

138,000,000 – Total cost in pounds of Manchester City’s starting XI in the same game.

(Some statistics courtesy of Opta Sports, The Times@InfostradaLive@StatManJon and NFL.com.)

The Ashes in numbers

Despite a brief rain delay, England duly completed a dominant win in Sydney in the early hours of this morning – the exclamation point on a 3-1 series victory – having already ensured they would retain the Ashes in Melbourne.

Each of England’s three wins have been by an innings margin, but that only begins to tell the tale of a series which the tourists – despite a major wobble in Perth which allowed Australia to level the scores – have largely dominated ever since recovering from a hesitant start in Brisbane.

All the hand-wringing over the decline of an Australian side which has dominated world cricket for nearly two decades should take nothing away from a talented and resilient England team which is now very much in the ascendancy. Here is the story of how England broke their 24-year wait for a series victory in Australia – in numbers.

The series in numbers

First Test, Brisbane (November 25th-29th): England 260 (Siddle 6/54) & 517/1 dec (Cook 235*, Trott 135*, Strauss 110) drew with Australia 481 (Hussey 195, Haddin 136, Finn 6/125) & 107/1. Series level 0-0.

Second Test, Adelaide (December 3rd-7th): England 620/5 dec (Pietersen 227, Cook 148) beat Australia 245 & 304 (Swann 5/91) by an innings and 71 runs. England lead 1-0.

Third Test, Perth (December 16th-19th): Australia 268 & 309 (Hussey 116, Tremlett 5/87) beat England 187 (Johnson 6/38) & 123 (Harris 6/47) by 267 runs. Series level 1-1.

Fourth Test, Melbourne (December 26-30): England 513 (Trott 168*, Siddle 6/75) beat Australia 98 & 258 by an innings and 157 runs. England lead 2-1 and retain the Ashes.

Fifth Test, Sydney (January 3-7): England 644 (Cook 189, Prior 118, Bell 115) beat Australia 280 & 281 by an innings and 83 runs. England win the series 3-1.

The teams in numbers

4 – England posted the four highest innings totals in the series.

4 – England passed 500 in four of their seven innings.

1 – Conversely, Australia scored over 400 only once – 481 in the opening innings of the first Test – and failed to pass 300 in six of their nine completed innings.

644 – Highest innings total, by England in the 5th Test in Sydney.

98 – Lowest innings total, by Australia in the 4th Test in Melbourne.

90 – England claimed 90 wickets during the series, versus just 56 for Australia.

17 - Number of players used by Australia during the series. England employed just 13.

Data courtesy of Cricinfo

Batting in numbers

6 – Despite batting three times fewer (seven innings versus ten), England had six of the top ten run-scorers in the series.

Alastair Cook was the leading run-scorer in the series (image courtesy of WIkipedia)

766Alastair Cook was the leading run-scorer in the series, with 766 runs at an average of 127.66.

235 – Cook also had the highest individual score of the series, 235 not out in the second innings in Adelaide.

570Michael Hussey was Australia’s top batsman with 570 runs, but his otherwise impressive average of 63.33 was less than half that of Cook.

5 – Number of England batsmen who scored at least 300 runs in the series (Cook, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Andrew Strauss) – versus just three for Australia (Hussey, Shane Watson, Brad Haddin).

4 – Number of batsmen who averaged 60 or more in the series. Three were English (Cook, Trott, Bell).

329 – The unbeaten stand of 329 between Cook and Trott in the first Test was the highest partnership of the series.

15 – There were 15 century partnerships during the series, 11 of them by English batsmen.

Ponting endured a miserable series as both captain and batsman

16.14 – Batting average of Australian captain Ricky Ponting, who scored just 113 runs in four Tests. Bowlers Peter Siddle and Mitchell Johnson both scored more runs and had a higher batting average than Ponting.

51.14 – England’s average runs per wicket during the series, getting on for double Australia’s average of 29.23.

3 – Number of centuries scored by Australian batsmen during the series (two for Hussey, one for Haddin).

3 – Number of centuries scored by Alastair Cook during the series. (As a team, England had nine courtesy of six different batsmen.)

6 – In total, there were six innings of 150 or more, but only one by an Australian (Hussey’s 195 in Brisbane).

21 – Number of sixes in the entire series. Haddin contributed five on his own, Hussey three.

81 - Unsurprisingly, no batsmen hit more fours in the series than Cook’s 81.

3 – Of the 30 men who batted in the series, only three (Stuart Broad, Steven Finn and Michael Beer) failed to score a boundary.

Data courtesy of Cricinfo

Bowling in numbers

Anderson led all bowlers with 24 wickets

24 – Number of wickets taken by Jimmy Anderson, the most on either side, and nine more than the leading Australian Mitchell Johnson.

8 – Number of bowlers who took 10 or more wickets in the series. Five were English, including the top two wicket-takers, Anderson and Chris Tremlett.

7 – Number of times a bowler took at least five wickets in an innings. Only three of these five-fors were by an English bowler (Swann, Tremlett, Finn), indicating a much more even distribution of wickets by the tourists.

5 – Bowlers captured six wickets in a single innings on five occasions, four by Australians: Peter Siddle (twice), Mitchell Johnson and Ryan Harris.

Johnson's destructive bowling in Perth was a rare high spot for the Aussies

9 – Johnson had the best individual match performance, taking 9/82 in Australia’s sole victory in Perth. In the same match, Harris claimed 9/106.

43.2 – Chris Tremlett took a wicket every 43.2 balls, the best strike rate among regular bowlers in the series.

6 – Six regular bowlers had a strike rate of better than a wicket every ten overs (60 balls) over the course of the series. Four were English (Anderson, Tremlett, Finn, Tim Bresnan).

3 – Three of England’s bowlers (Bresnan, Tremlett, Anderson) averaged fewer than 30 runs per wicket. Only one Australian (Harris) did.

Data courtesy of Cricinfo

Fielding in numbers

Prior took 23 catches and added a hundred with the bat

23 – England wicketkeeper Matt Prior claimed 23 dismissals in the series, all catches. Six of these came in Australia’s first innings in Melbourne, the most by any fielder in the series.

10 – All ten Australian first innings wickets in Melbourne fell to catches behind square.

9 – Despite a poor series with the bat, Paul Collingwood had nine catches – one more than Australian wicketkeeper Haddin.

3 – Collingwood (in Perth) and Kevin Pietersen (in Melbourne) were the only non-wicketkeepers to take three catches in a single match.

And finally, a few random numbers

0 – Stuart Broad’s first-ball duck in his only innings in Brisbane meant he was the only player not to score a run in the entire series.

Siddle gave himself his own birthday present with an opening day hat-trick

26 – Peter Siddle celebrated his 26th birthday by recording a hat-trick on the opening day of the first Test. He was the fifth Australian to register a hat-trick against England.

1 – England’s first innings in Sydney was the first time ever in a Test Match innings that the sixth, seventh and eighth wickets all produced century partnerships (154, 107 and 102 runs, respectively).

9 – England batsmen have scored nine centuries in the series, the most ever by any visiting team in Australia. Other than England, no touring side in Australia has ever scored more than six hundreds in a series.

6 – During the third Test, Michael Hussey recorded his sixth straight score of over fifty in Ashes matches, the only man ever to achieve this feat.

3 – Australia lost by an innings three times during the series – the first time they have done so against any opponent.

How England retained the Ashes: in numbers

In the small hours of this morning, England retained the Ashes after securing a dominant victory in Melbourne by an innings and 71 runs, to take an insurmountable 2-1 advantage in the five-match series. It is the first time they have successfully retained the urn since the tour of 1986/87, which also marked the occasion of their last series victory Down Under.

The tourists will now travel to Sydney for the final Test starting January 3rd keen to clinch an overall series win as the beleaguered Ricky Ponting contemplates the inevitable end of his run as captain of an Australian team which now appears to have a long and difficult rebuilding job ahead of them.

Here is a quick overview of the first four Tests, and a look at some of the key numbers which explain England’s victory.

First Test, Brisbane (November 25th-29th)

Alastair Cook's 235 not out ensured England earned an ultimately comfortable draw in Brisbane

England 1st innings: 260 (Bell 76, Cook 67, Siddle 6/54)

Australia 1st innings: 481 (Hussey 195, Haddin 136, Katich 50, Finn 6/125)

England 2nd innings: 517/1 dec (Cook 235*, Trott 135*, Strauss 110)

Australia 2nd innings: 107/1 (Ponting 51*)

Match drawn

England started the series on the back foot, as Peter Siddle‘s six-wicket haul reduced them to a sub-par 260, and then Mike Hussey and Brad Haddin put on 307 for the sixth wicket in Australia’s first innings. But on an increasingly placid pitch, the tourists responded in style, with their top three all scoring centuries and Alastair Cook registering a career-high 235 not out, the highest individual score in the series. An ultimately comfortable draw felt more like a win.

In numbers:

5 – Peter Siddle celebrated his 26th birthday by recording a hat-trick on the opening day of the first Ashes Test in Brisbane. He is the fifth Australian to register a hat-trick against England.

29 – Hussey’s 195 was the first time he had passed 100 in the first innings of a Test match in his last 29 attempts.

2 – England’s openers both hit centuries in a Test innings for just the second time since 1990.

235 – Cook’s massive innings surpassed the great Don Bradman for the highest Test score ever at the Gabba.

329 – Cook and Jonathan Trott‘s unbeaten second-wicket stand, a record England stand on Australia soil, surpassed Hussey and Haddin’s record-breaking stand of 307 from two days earlier. Trott finished unbeaten on 135.

2 – It is only the second time that England’s top three batsmen have scored centuries in the same innings.

2 – Total number of wickets to fall in the final two days of play.

Second Test, Adelaide (December 3rd-7th)

Pietersen's 227 set up a crushing vitory to give England a 1-0 lead

Australia 1st innings: 245 (Hussey 93, Haddin 56, Watson 51, Anderson 4/51)

England 1st innings: 620/5 dec (Pietersen 227, Cook 148, Trott 78, Bell 68*)

Australia 2nd innings: 304 (Clarke 80, Watson 57, Hussey 52, Swann 5/91)

England won by an innings and 71 runs

On a good pitch, Jimmy Anderson spearheaded an attack which bowled out Australia cheaply before the top order continued where they had left off in Brisbane, with Kevin Pietersen bullying the Aussie attack during his double ton and Cook adding another century. Despite a century stand by Hussey and Michael Clarke, Graeme Swann whipped through the tail, finishing with a five-for as England completed an innings victory on the final day shortly before the heavens opened.

In numbers:

2 – Number of runs scored by Australia at the fall of their third first innings wicket in Adelaide, as the Aussies struggled to 245 all out.

15 – 25-year old Alastair Cook‘s first innings 148 was his 15th Test century. Only Sachin Tendulkar (19) has ever scored more before the age of 26. (Don Bradman also had 15 hundreds at the same age.)

17 – Kevin Pietersen‘s first innings of 227 was his highest Test score, and ended a barren run of 17 Tests without a hundred. It was also the highest ever score by an Englishman at Adelaide.

4 – After losing captain Andrew Strauss with the score on three, England posted four consecutive century partnerships in their first innings.

29 – Pietersen claimed his fifth Test wicket – and his first for 29 months (Dale Steyn, 10th July 2008) – by dismissing Michael Clarke with the final ball of day four.

100 – This was England‘s 100th Test win over Australia. They have lost 132 and drawn 91.

Third Test, Perth (December 16th-19th)

Tremlett's eight wickets was the one high point in a dismal England performance at Perth

Australia 1st innings: 268 (Johnson 62, Hussey 61, Haddin 53, Anderson 3/61, Tremlett 3/63)

England 1st innings: 187 (Bell 53, Strauss 52, Johnson 6/38)

Australia 2nd innings: 309 (Hussey 116, Watson 95, Tremlett 5/87)

England 2nd innings:123 (Trott 31, Harris 6/47)

Australia won by 267 runs

Australia surprisingly levelled the series at 1-1 as England twice failed to cope with a WACA pitch which offered plenty of movement for the quick bowlers. The recalled Mitchell Johnson and all-rounder Ryan Harris each registered six-fors to rip the heart out of the tourists’ batting. The only bright spark for England was Chris Tremlett, in for the injured Stuart Broad, who finished with a return of of 8/150.

In numbers:

9 – Australia stumbled to 28/3 in their first innings. It was only the ninth time in Test history that a side has been reduced to under 30-3 in their first innings in consecutive matches.

6 – Michael Hussey recorded his sixth straight score of over fifty in Ashes matches, the only man ever to do so.

109 – England collapsed from 78/0 to 187 all out in the first innings. The 109 runs separating the first from the last wicket represented their worst such sequence ever at Perth …

100 – … Until they went from 23/0 to 123 all out in their second innings, losing ten wickets for just 100.

6 – This was Australia’s sixth consecutive win over England at the WACA.

Fourth Test, Melbourne (December 26-30)

Trott's 168 not out put England in an unassailable position as they retained the Ashes

Australia 1st innings: 98 (Clarke 20, Tremlett 4/26, Anderson 4/44)

England 1st innings: 513 (Trott 168*, Prior 85, Cook 82, Strauss 69, Pietersen 51, Siddle 6/75)

Australia 2nd innings: 258 (Haddin 55*, Watson 54, Bresnan 4/50)

England won by an innings and 157 runs

England bounced straight back from their capitulation in Perth with their most dominant performance of the series. Tremlett and Anderson skittled the Aussies for just 98 – all ten wickets falling to catches behind square – before the batsmen put England into an unassailable position. Each of the top four passed 50, with Jonathan Trott adding 168 not out to his unbeaten century in Brisbane. Australia were set 415 just to make England bat again. As wickets fell with metronomic regularity, they never looked close to reaching that milestone, let alone saving the match, as England completed victory with over five sessions to spare.

In numbers:

98 – Australia recorded their lowest ever score against England at the MCG as they were skittled out for 98 by England on the opening day.

10 – All ten of Australia’s first innings wickets fells to catches behind the wicket, with England keeper Matt Prior claiming six of them.

10 – Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook recorded their tenth century stand as an opening pair – only Jack Hobbs and Herbert Sutcliffe have exceeded that number for England.

158 – The unbeaten stand of 158 between Prior and Jonathan Trott was England’s largest sixth-wicket stand at Melbourne, surpassing the previous best of 140 set in 1929.

1 – This is the first time ever that Australia have lost by an innings twice in the same series outside of England.

12 – There hasn’t been a draw between England and Australia at the MCG in their last 12 meetings there. Australia have won seven to England’s five.

Analysis

It would be fair to say that England’s successful defence of the Ashes owes much to having a settled side confident of its own abilities – particularly when compared to Ricky Ponting’s team, which has been struggling to rebuild for the past couple of years and has constantly chopped and changed throughout this series. However, a deeper analysis of the statistics sheds further light on the sources of England’s victory.

Firstly, England’s top six has both a familiar and settled look to it, with strength in depth. Despite batting only six times as a team – compared to Australia’s eight – England can boast five of the top eight run-scorers in the series to date. Four – Cook, Trott, Pietersen and Ian Bell - have averaged above 50 (Cook and Trott’s averages are both in excess of 110). Only Paul Collingwood (70 runs at 14.00) can be considered to have had a poor series with the bat, and even he has chipped in with seven catches, more than anyone other than England wicketkeeper Prior.

Cook is the series’ leading run-scorer with 575 (at an average of 115.40), and while his success on this tour owes much to this young man’s talent – having just turned 26 before Christmas, he already has 15 Test centuries to his name – it also says much about the ineffectiveness of an Australian attack who had specifically targeted a perceived weakness outside his off-stump.

By comparison, only three of Australia’s batsmen have passed 200 runs (versus five for England). They certainly missed the injured Simon Katich after the second Test but both Michael Clarke (148 runs at 21.14) and captain Ricky Ponting (113 at 16.14) misfired throughout, registering just a single fifty each.

Analysis by Tim Liew. Data courtesy of cricinfo.com

These averages are reflected in both individual and team performances. Australian batsmen have actually passed fifty more times (17) than their English counterparts (16), but have converted just three of those into hundreds – only one of which occurred after the first innings of the first Test. England, on the other, had six centuries spread among four batsmen, including double tons for Cook and Pietersen.

Moreover, England have put together twice as many hundred partnerships (eight versus four) so far in the series, applying pressure to the opposing bowlers on a more consistent basis. This is doubly impressive when you consider that England have only batted six times so far (versus eight for Australia), losing just 46 wickets compared with 70 for the hosts.

Analysis by Tim Liew. Data courtesy of cricinfo.com

Overall, England have averaged over 48 runs for every wicket they have lost – despite their twin collapses in the third Test – nearly 19 per wicket more than the Aussies.

Particularly important in this respect have been the solid starts afforded to them by the opening pair of Strauss and Cook, who put on 50 or more for the first wicket three times out of six, including stands of 188 to help save the game in Brisbane and then 159 in Melbourne to provide the platform for the Ashes-clinching victory.

By comparison, Australia’s opening pairs of Watson/Katich and Watson/Hughes passed 50 only three times in eight attempts, with a best start of 84. An average first-wicket partnership of 34 – less than half Strauss and Cook’s benchmark of 75 – tells its own story.

Analysis by Tim Liew. Data courtesy of cricinfo.com

England’s dominance and strength in depth have also been evident in the bowling figures. The tourists can boast four of the top five wicket-takers as of the end of the fourth Test. Australia’s bowlers have tended to take wickets in bursts – Peter Siddle has twice taken six wickets in an innings, and Mitchell Johnson and Ryan Harris have also contributed six-fors – and rarely had more than one or at most two firing at the same time.

England’s bowlers have functioned better as a unit, taking wickets more consistently and sharing the workload more evenly. The depth in England’s squad has also been impressive. Tremlett played the last two Tests in place of Broad, gave Australia’s batsmen no end of trouble, and took 13 wickets. And when Steven Finn was dropped for this Test, his replacement Tim Bresnan ended with a match total of 6/75.

Analysis by Tim Liew. Data courtesy of cricinfo.com

England can now carry the sweet taste of victory all the way to Sydney next week, while the Australian selectors find themselves in the same position which England have occupied for most of the past 25 years – defeated and at times humiliated, and in need of fresh blood to rejuvenate an ailing team. Even a series-tying victory in the final Test, however, would do little more than paper over the cracks.

England, on the other hand, will march on and dream of open-top bus parades. And deservedly so, for despite their wobbles they have been by far the better team in this series. The Ashes are coming home.

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