Boland buoyed by Perth spell: 'I'm good enough to compete with anyone'
Australia seamer pleased with how he bounced back after wayward start to first Test
Andrew McGlashan
02-Dec-2025 • 5 hrs ago
Even when Mitchell Starc blew England away with seven wickets during the first innings in Perth it did not go unnoticed that, in an attack missing Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, the visitors had taken Scott Boland for more than six an over.
It came following pre-series debate about how they would look to take on Boland after largely dominating him in the two matches he played in the 2023 Ashes. However, the second day was a different story. Boland's three-wicket burst after lunch - removing Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope and Harry Brook in the space of 11 balls - turned the match on its head when England had been 105 runs ahead with nine wickets in hand.
"It probably just proves to me that my good stuff, it doesn't matter who it's to, I think it feels like when I'm getting in the right areas it's good enough to anyone," Boland said ahead of the second Test at the Gabba. "I think that gives me a little bit of confidence that if I'm nailing my game… I'm good enough to compete with anyone."
Having overpitched too often in the first innings, Boland adjusted both his line and length in the second, hanging the ball wider, drawing Pope and Brook into drives away from their body. After the match, Andrew McDonald said the initial plans were partly to blame for the tactics Boland used with the new ball on the opening day.
"I think Ronnie's pretty nice to me there," Boland said. "I just had one of those days where I just felt like I was over-pitching too much. Obviously, I wanted to start a little bit fuller than normal with the new ball, but I probably bowled seven or eight half-volleys and they all went for four. Some days half of them don't and you think it's [going] a little bit better.
"I was pretty happy with how I bounced back in the second innings. I sort of went back to my natural length. Stuff that I know I'm really good at. I was obviously really disappointed with how I bowled in the first innings because generally I don't bowl too many half-volleys."
On a pitch at the Gabba likely to have good pace and carry, if not perhaps to quite the level of Perth Stadium, Boland expects similar tactics to come into play. "I think we'll get some good bounce here at the Gabba, which we usually do," he said. "We went through what worked in Perth and what's going to work here. It feels like a lot of the stuff is very similar."
Pope, who was tied down before losing patience and edging to Alex Carey, accepted there were things to learn but continued to see opportunity if Australia's bowlers kept targeting a wider line.
Scott Boland's burst on day two in Perth helped swing the first Test•Getty Images
"It's trying to learn the lessons, and take some positives," he said. "I think it is just about being really precise with how you go about it. They can hang it out wide but as soon as they do miss their lengths it is about trying to put them under pressure there as well.
"I look back on that [second] innings and the dismissal, [and] it's just being that bit more precise, going about it in the same way but having that little bit more [precision] in my game."
Boland, who averages 13.16 from four day-night Tests, also sees the short ball being a threat again with England unlikely to back down from a challenge despite the bigger boundaries on most Australian grounds. However, he did note that their lower order had briefly rallied in the second innings, with Gus Atkinson and Brydon Carse added 50 in 36 balls, when the quicks banged in the ball in.
"Definitely the ground size plays a big part in that," Boland said. "Perth Stadium is really wide, really big pockets. And the ground is quite similar here. Same as the MCG and SCG. Adelaide's probably the only one that's a little bit different. I think that worked in our favour.
"They [England] tried some bouncer plans which worked well at different times. I think sometimes when you do go to that bouncer plan, you can leak runs pretty quickly. I think we had them 6 for 80 [88] and then we sort of went into some full-on bouncer plans and leaked [runs] a little bit [but] we got some wickets. First innings, it worked really quick and then second things, they played a little bit better. So I think we'll just be adjusting on the fly."
There has been intrigue this week around whether Cummins could make a late entrance for the Brisbane Test, as he ramps up his return to bowling, despite not being named in the squad although a return in Adelaide remains the likely outcome. "He looked in red-hot form the other night, as good as you'll see [from] a fast bowler charging in in the nets," Boland said.
Meanwhile, Hazlewood is due to join the squad on Thursday to continue his return to bowling after being ruled out of the first two Tests with a hamstring injury. He is considered unlikely to be in contention until either Melbourne or Sydney.
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo
