Wednesday, 26 November 2025

The art of being Travis Head

Bemoaning after watching your team being manhandled by Travis Head has become a recurring exercise for many in the cricketing world. Stokes' England are the latest victims of another assault of an innings by the South Australian. The English fast bowling brigade that made the Aussies run for cover on the first day was mercilessly mauled on the next afternoon by one man who was prepared to be brave like he always is. He is in the cream of cricketers who inevitably show up at the big games. Labelling him as the most clutch cricketer in the world would not be irrefutable. What he has achieved since the home Ashes in 2021 is scandalous.

In 2021, Pat Cummins had bowled England out for 147 in the ashes opener in Brisbane. Head walked in at 189-3 and it quickly became 195-5 with a couple of quick wickets at the other end. Knowing that a fourth innings chase would have been very difficult, Australia had to get a big first innings lead. The South Australian scored at better than a run-a-ball on his way to a counter attacking 152 to bury England in the dirt. In completely contrasting circumstances, Travis walked in at 12-3 after England asked Australia to bat first in the final test in Hobart. Stuart Broad and Ollie Robinson had the ball on a string and none of the Australians could lay bat on ball. Another swashbuckling hundred was to follow to help Australia get to a respectable total which eventually led them to win the test and the series 4-0. Next on his radar was India, twice in 2023, both in ICC Finals, both of which I had the fortune or the misfortune to witness live. Firstly, at the Oval in the World Test Championship Final, he resurrected Australia's first innings with a blazing 163 to bat India out of the game. Australia scored in excess of 450 which also included a century from Steve Smith. India could never recover from it as they lost the match by 209 runs. After less than three months, Australia's World Cup campaign had gotten off to the worst possible start with heavy defeats against India and South Africa in the first two matches. Head missed the first five games but recovered from injury to return to the side as Australia faced the Kiwis in a crucial encounter in Dharamsala. He marked the start to his World Cup with a 67 ball 109 to provide Australia the kickstart to post 388 which turned out to be a match winning total. He had a quite next couple of games, probably waiting for a big occasion. Australia finished third in the league to avoid India and set up a semifinal showdown against South Africa at the Eden Gardens. Proteas batted first in very tricky circumstances and quickly found themselves tottering at 24-4 in 12 overs. Klassen along with Miller steadied the ship as South Africa looked on course to a respectable total until Cummins handed the ball to Travis Head. Unsurprisingly, he took removed Klassen and Jansen in the same over with some agricultural off spin bowling to put the onus of scoring entirely on David Miller. Then with the bat in hand, he stroked a fluent 62 off 48 balls in pursuit of 213. His innings meant that the rest of the batters had very little to do even though the South Africans were superb with the ball once Head got out. Next up India, by far the best team in the tournament, in the Final. In the first innings, he brilliantly caught Rohit Sharma running back from cover point. It completely sank India's innings to get restricted at 240. It was not a mountain to climb but looked like one after Australia were reduced to 47-3 thanks to Jasprit Bumrah. Another wicket could have handed India the momentum and probably the World Cup. It was Head who continued to take chances when the ball was swinging round corners. It paid off and won Australia the World Cup with a memorable 137 in the cauldron of 110000 Indians. Fast forward to December 2024, all of Australia was pounding the team after the heavy loss in Perth. The South Australian stood up with back to back hundreds in Adelaide and Brisbane to swing the momentum back in Australia's favor. And now he has done it again in the very first match of the series which could go a long way in defining the series in completely different ways for England and Australia.

Travis Head is a maverick and the kind of stuff he produces with the bat is scarcely believable. It is madness most of the times but there is a method to it. He seems immortal when in the zone but the guy is also vulnerable and all the more relatable for it. His game often isn't a visual feast or suitable for framing but the fervor to win matches for Australia makes his batting an acentric odyssey. Travis Head's batting is an experience which is arduous to put in theory. Maybe it boils down to simplifying the game, probably the oldest cliche in any sport. Head has a limited range of shots and all of it is the conventional scoring areas. He very seldom scoops, reverse sweeps or plays the lap behind the wicket. His batting is based predominantly on four shots- the fierce cuts behind point hit with tremendous power often splitting third man and point, the liquid whip like drives through cover point hit with a vigorous bat speed that make the fielders think twice before putting a hand in its path to the boundary, the flick through midwicket which is often thin, supple and graceful, often when the bowler tries to overcorrect after being hit through the off side and the pull shot, primarily placed in front of square rather than behind it. He is not a six hitter but he is very good at moving around the crease and exploring various empty pockets in the field. Some of the shot making could be seen as bravado and credited with stupidity but with a steady bunch of batsmen around him, Australia can afford to have a free spirit like Travis Head in the team. 

Having won and achieved so much while still being 31, Travis Head is already revered all around Australia. He seems to have mastered the three challenges that every sportsperson faces- the borderline terrifying motivation to train, making peace with the limitations of your game and the control of emotions. Live sport is the last appointment living left to us and many people find refuge in it to escape from the pressures of work life. Cricket needs personalities like Travis Head if it is to sustain beyond the shortest format in the long run.

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

Bazball to 'Dumb'ball

The unravelling of England in the bright sunshine on the Western Australian coast has sparked the same old discussions that the media are used to after every Brisbane test for the last 14 years. For an England team to lose in Australia isn't a big deal but the manner in which it all happened was quite telling of the ugly side of Bazball. After being 105 runs ahead at lunch on day 2 with 9 wickets in hand, anyone who says they put their money on Australia winning by evening must be lying. If ever the match was to finish on day 2, it had to be England bowling Australia out for another sub-150 total to win the test. It should never have been the other way round. Boland looked in rhythm against England for the first time since Hobart 2021. Duckett got out to a decent delivery and what followed next was to have a direct impact on the result. Pope was trying to drive on the up for an hour and he finally edged one to Alex Carey after playing & missing for about 15 times before that. Harry Brook came in at number 5 and nicked the third delivery he faced to Usman Khawaja, again trying to drive Boland on the up. Joe Root was watching this from the other end but didn't seem to understand any of it as he also dragged one onto his stumps while trying to play the same bloody shot off Mitchell Starc! Stokes again fell to Starc as England collapsed dramatically to be 104-7. Gus Atkinson and Bryden Carse played a shot on almost every delivery to add 50 more runs before the final three wickets fell to three horrible shots. The sequence of the last three wickets was bad but not worse than that of Pope-Brook-Root. It looked as if they are trapped in a fever dream. Once is a mistake, twice is a choice and choosing do the same thing expecting a different result is madness. Playing against this England side must feel like interacting with a man who is shouting his guts out with noise cancellation headphones on, they just keep doing the same thing irrespective of what you do! The compulsion to play at every ball has led to their demise many a times in the last couple of years and yet they are reluctant to change. Is it because they genuinely believe that going harder is the correct option or because they just do not want to admit their mistakes? What Travis Head did is probably what England dream of. He played at a strike rate of almost 150 but did not play a single drive on the up. He pulled, cut and only drove half volleys. 

England played all their cricket in the last 3 years with this Ashes in mind. They built a team, especially the fast bowling group, specifically for Australia and it worked wonders on the first afternoon when they had Australia running for cover. With a crucial lead of 40 runs, England were the clear favorites going into the second innings against an Australian team having a debutant opener potentially patterned by a makeshift opener. Being over 100 runs ahead at lunch, England were an hour of good batting away from having Australia at their mercy. England's self destruction meant Australia were chasing 204, the highest team total of the match if they were to get there. Travis Head again stood up when the chips were down as he always does in important matches for Australia and won them the test single handedly. 

Only Australia in world cricket play pink ball tests and win almost all of them. England have got 11 days before Brisbane to prepare for the toughest test on this tour while being 1-0 down. Australia will potentially have Cummins back if not Hazlewood as well which adds to the degree of difficulty. If Stokes' team doesn't bring nuance to their batting approach, it is going to be 2-0 to Australia when the teams head to Adelaide.