Zak Crawley settles the nerves as he bounces back from Perth pair
Opener produces vital half-century to help revive England from another wobbly start
ESPNcricinfo staff
04-Dec-2025 • 6 hrs ago
Zak Crawley gets forward to drive during his innings of 76 • Gareth Copley/CA/Cricket Australia/Getty Images
After their combined tally of eight runs in four innings at Perth, it proved to be a day of revived fortunes at the Gabba for two of the most scrutinised batters in England's ranks. While Joe Root secured the plaudits for his magnificent maiden century on Australian soil, Zak Crawley's bounce-back from a first-Test pair proved a similarly cathartic display.
Though he fell when well set, gloving a pull off Michael Neser shortly after the first interval, his 76 from 93 balls was nonetheless a crucial contribution, coming as it did after his first-Test nemesis Mitchell Starc had again struck hard with the new ball, dismissing Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope for ducks in his first two overs.
Crawley, by then, had already driven Starc through the covers for four, to bring up his first runs of the series, and he carried on in a similar vein, picking off a total of 11 boundaries, the majority coming when Australia's bowlers strayed into his arc.
"I did feel good, to be honest," Crawley told TNT Sports at the close of the first day's play. "I felt much better than Perth. I was just trying to keep it simple, just trying to score straight on the leg side, and then if it was really full, maybe on the off side. Yeah, I was happy with my knock."
Crawley's relative watchfulness outside off was the key feature of his innings, and a tribute to the hours in the nets that England have put in (in between some notable moments of downtime) since their two-day defeat in the series opener.
"I think it'd have felt a long break if I'd have got two hundreds, to be honest," he said. "It was big old gap after a two-day game. But yeah, it's a good chance to get some practice in. And I felt comfortable. I felt calm today, and managed to settle the nerves. So I was pleased with how I played.
"I had a clear plan and I stuck to it. There were still a couple of loose shots in there, as I tend to do, but got away with them, and I played nicely down the ground as well. By trying to score on the leg side, that made me leave a bit better outside off with the extra bounce today, and then when I got in, the ball started doing a bit less."
England's close-of-play score of 325 for 9 looked significantly more healthy thanks to an unbeaten tenth-wicket stand of 61 between Root, who finished unbeaten on 135, and Jofra Archer, whose 32 not out was his highest Test score, in just his second innings at No.11.
Until Australia have batted, it will be hard to tell how good that score actually is, but after the groundstaff had given the pitch a final trim to 3mm of grass before the match, Crawley knew it had been a good toss for England to win, notwithstanding their early collapse to 5 for 2.
"The last few days, it's been really green here. So we all thought it's going to be a green nipper again. And they obviously shaved it this morning, so it looked like a great wicket to bat on, with the overheads as well.
"I was gutted to get out when I did, the pitch was just getting a bit flatter there," he added. "But obviously we finished the day well with Rooty and Jof at the end there. So it's good day."
At 264 for 9 with approximately half an hour of the day remaining, there had been some speculation that England might declare to insert Australia under the lights, much as they had done in their previous pink-ball Test against New Zealand in Mount Maunganui two years ago. But with Root going strong, and with memories of England's infamous declaration at Edgbaston in 2023, Crawley said a repeat scenario had not been on the cards.
"No talk of declaring," he said. "We were talking about boys going really hard, and if they got out, then it was kind of a win-win situation. So they went hard, and they came off, and there's a valuable 50 runs there for us."
Root will be on strike when day two gets underway, and will have the chance to extend England's innings into the morning session, with six overs to come until the new ball is due. For now, though, he will have a chance to savour a significant landmark in his career, and one that may just confirm his credentials as England's greatest Test batter.
"I'm chuffed for him," Crawley said, after Root's 40th Test hundred and his first in Australia. "He hasn't been speaking about it at all to us, that's just the outside noise. He's just very focused on just getting whatever score is needed on the day, and proved to be a hundred today.
"But he's the best player I've ever played with, or probably against as well. And he's a champion bloke. I'm chuffed to bits for him."
