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Mark Wood 'quietly confident' about fitness ahead of Ashes opener

Fast bowler has taken cautious route to recovery after knee surgery but says he's nearly ready for action

ESPNcricinfo staff
16-Oct-2025 • 9 hrs ago
Mark Wood was back with England's Test squad, England vs West Indies training, Men's Test series, Trent Bridge, July 16, 2024

Mark Wood has been back in training after knee surgery and will arrive in New Zealand next week  •  Gareth Copley/Getty Images

Mark Wood says he is "quietly confident" that he will be fit and ready to perform in the first Ashes Test in Perth on November 21.
Wood was England's leading wicket-taker in their 4-0 loss in the 2021-22 Ashes and blew Australia away with his pace to be named player of the match at Headingley in the 2023 series. But he has not bowled in a competitive match since the Champions Trophy in February, missing the entire English summer after surgery on his knee.
He had initially targeted the fifth Test of England's Test series against India for a potential comeback and was seen bowling with international team-mates in the nets throughout the summer. However, he reported swelling which required fluid to be drained from his knee. A similar setback saw him miss out on Durham's County Championship run-in.
Wood is due to arrive in New Zealand next week where he will join up with England's white-ball squads and step up his rehabilitation, though he will not feature in a competitive match. He has been bowling in the heated marquee at England's training base in Loughborough in recent weeks, and believes he is in a "good position" ahead of the Ashes.
"It was a frustrating summer," Wood told the Wisden Cricket Weekly podcast. "I didn't get to play any cricket and my knee, at times when you think that you're just about ready to play, it was not just quite there.
"I got knocked back a couple of times, but in the tent it's been going well. I've had the speed gun out and the pace is getting up there, so I'm building nicely into New Zealand first, and then the Australian leg.
"Hopefully, I'm in form, bowling well in the practice games and in the nets, and can put my hand up for that game [in Perth]. The rehab hasn't just been a straight curve. It's been a bit up and down, but I'm in a good position now where I'm hoping to kick on for that game.
"I never want to give an answer where I say, 'Yes, I'm pumped, I'm ready'. But I'm in a confident place at the minute and feeling a lot more positive, so I'm quietly confident."
Wood said that his rehabilitation from knee surgery has been different to previous elbow and ankle injuries, and described the process as "annoying". He explained: "You keep thinking, 'I'm nearly there' and you're just about to press the trigger to play. The fifth Test against India, I was so close, and then when I was at my top speed, my knee swelled up so I had to have it drained.
"Then again at the back end of the year with Durham, I was so close to playing a game, but again, I just kept getting this slight swelling. The ECB, with what was coming up, were like, 'Look, it's a risk we don't need to take.' Thankfully, the last few times I've bowled, there hasn't been that swelling there. It's much more positive."
Wood has also spent some of this summer building his coaching credentials for his post-playing career, including a short stint with the England Lions. He is studying for his Level Three coaching qualification in the same cohort as several former England players, including Steven Finn, Chris Jordan, Sarah Taylor and Chris Woakes.