England can rule the world

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England have the makings of something here, having won from despair. The post-Flintoff era will bring challenges of balance and tone, it may also be the opportunity for restructuring elsewhere (Paul Collingwood and, despite his three late joyful wickets, Stephen Harmison). It is rapt with possibilities. Smashing.
So not only is it appropriate to celebrate the return of the Ashes in the context of one average team beating another average team, it is also incumbent on the powers that be to make sure that this time England’s defence of the urn is treated more like a serious sporting mission than a family outing to Mablethorpe.
He [Strauss] is essentially a cautious captain, prone to thinking primarily about saving runs, not taking wickets, and about getting into a position from which defeat is impossible before thinking of victory. Those quibbles aside, it is clear that he is enormously respected by his team, as leader, player and human being — even if they think him a trifle posh. His greatest attribute was his calmness, his ability not to get sidetracked by every crisis that came his way. His was a reassuring presence at the top of the order and at the head of the unit.
Greatness is a strange thing to quantify. Churchill was not a particularly good Prime Minister if you study the 'stats'. The normal humdrum business of government didn't really get his juices flowing. But for courage, fortitude and an ability to inspire the nation when it really mattered, he was our greatest.
Siddhartha Talya is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo