Stuart Broad has hailed this summer's victory over Australia as "the most special Ashes win I've been involved with", but says that England know from bitter previous experience not to let their focus slip when they return to Test action against Pakistan in the UAE next month.
Broad, whose career-best haul of 8 for 15 on the first morning at Trent Bridge was the defining moment of the summer, is one of four survivors from the England team that travelled to the Emirates in January 2012 as the No.1-ranked Test team in the world, but finished up on the wrong end of a 3-0 whitewash.
Despite competing with the ball on that trip, with Broad himself topping the averages with 13 wickets at 20.46, England struggled with the bat in each of the three Tests, being dismissed for fewer than 200 in four of their six innings. In the
second Test in Abu Dhabi, they were set 145 for a series-levelling victory but were shot out for 72 by Pakistan's spinners, Saeed Ajmal and Abdur Rehman.
"[It's a] really tough [challenge]," Broad told ESPNcricinfo. "But we have got guys of experience who have toured there before. Myself, Jimmy [Anderson], Belly, Cooky, we know the challenges we'll face there, we know we'll have to spend long times in the field to create pressure to take wickets and bat a long time."
In addition to winning the Ashes, England have won plaudits this summer for the approach they have taken to their cricket, with a new positive attitude reaping dividends across all three formats.
Nevertheless, England's Test record remains erratic, with four defeats in their last nine outings against West Indies, New Zealand and Australia. In particular, the nature of their two crushing defeats in the Ashes - on the slower, less seam-friendly surfaces at Lord's and The Oval - doesn't bode well for the challenges to come.
"The biggest skill as an international cricketer is adapting to conditions," said Broad. "Not every wicket you can go out and play hugely positively on.
"I've not played at Sharjah [the venue for the third Test], but the wickets in Dubai and [Abu Dhabi] offered a tiny bit of seam but very slowly so we just bowled really straight.
"But as a batting unit I remember we just got bowled and lbw a huge amount, which is not what you'd expect from world-class players. So that's something we'll have to learn from as a batting unit, to make sure we are playing straight, and look to get big runs because that's what will determine the UAE trip, big runs on the board."
Broad is mindful of England's tendency in recent years of following notable series wins with disappointing follow-ups - a pattern that was set in motion with a 2-0 defeat against Pakistan in 2005 following the euphoria of that summer's Ashes, and continued two winters ago with the 5-0 whitewash that followed straight on from England's successful home campaign against Australia in 2013.
However, he believes that the current England team is at a different stage of its development to previous outfits, and credits Andrew Strauss, the team director, with instilling a new ethic that will help them to retain their focus throughout a tough winter that also includes a Test series against South Africa in December and January.
"I think when Straussy came into the job, he had a long-term vision," said Broad. "Obviously we had a huge goal to win the Ashes this summer but it's further than that. We want to be a team that the fans enjoy watching, our style of cricket has changed, we are playing a style that people will want to tune in and watch and come to the ground and see.
"We want a style of play that will take us a long way with the fans but also get us to the top of the world, and I think we are developing that. Obviously our inconsistencies have been well documented - win, lose, win, lose - but that keeps you on your toes and makes you want to improve when you are training."
"There's a huge goal this winter," he added. "I've not been involved in a Test series win against South Africa, and we got beaten heavily in the UAE last time. There are a lot of goals and a lot of motivation for a lot of success this winter, and when you have a young squad and guys who are desperate to succeed, you can take the team a long way."
Broad, who was not involved in the one-day series against Australia, has been enjoying a rare period of down-time since the Ashes, with a chance to reflect on a remarkable summer in which England's success was closely linked to his personal achievement. His 21 wickets at 20.90 enabled him to become only the fifth England bowler to claim 300 in Tests.
"It was extra special because we weren't expected to win," said Broad. "Australia came into the series with such form and dominated the World Cup. If you read all the newspapers and saw all the predictions before it started it was Australia, Australia, Australia.
"It was a whole team effort, a group of guys who threw themselves in the series. That's why it felt so special. We have an end goal to be the best in the world in Test match cricket. That might be a few years away but we know we have the talent in changing room to reach that."
Andrew Miller is the UK Editor of ESPNcricinfo. @miller_cricket