England’s Ashes campaign couldn’t have begun in harsher fashion—crushed inside two days in Perth and buried under a wave of criticism back home. But even as the dust settles on the eight-wicket humiliation, head coach Brendon McCullum has stepped up with a message of calm defiance, urging fans to “keep the faith” and insisting England won’t back away from their bold Bazball philosophy.
England’s eight-wicket loss—decided shockingly inside 48 hours—triggered a storm of criticism back home. The visitors were rattled by batting collapses in both innings, undone by their own aggression and overwhelmed by Travis Head’s blistering 69-ball hundred. For a side that hasn’t won a Test in Australia for 15 years, it was another grim reminder of how quickly things can spiral here.
Yet McCullum, characteristically calm amid chaos, believes this is no time to abandon the method that has defined England’s modern revival.
“Keep the faith,” he told reporters, his message directed squarely at England supporters who watched their side fall to 0–1 in the series. “Sometimes we get beaten and it looks pretty ugly, but this mentality is also what allows us to believe in our abilities when we step out to play.”
The coach conceded that the execution faltered in Perth but insisted the philosophy remains non-negotiable.
“Just because we are one down in the series doesn’t change what we believe in. There are times we don’t get it right, but we have to stay calm, stay together and plot our way back into this series—just as we have done before.”
Bazball Under Fire—But McCullum Stays Unmoved
The backlash was intense. Former players tore into England’s approach, calling the batting “reckless” and the collapse “avoidable.” Critics pointed to a painful pattern: England reached promising positions—160/5 on day one, then 65/1 in the second innings—only to crash spectacularly each time. Five wickets for 12 runs on day one set the tone. Five more in a heap on day two sealed the damage.
But for McCullum, the answer isn’t retreat. It’s resilience.
A Stark Record in Australia
England’s struggles Down Under are well documented. Since their last series win in 2010-11, they have:
Lost 14 Tests
Drawn 2
Won none
The Perth Test looked like a rare opening—especially after England bowled Australia out for 132—but familiar frailties resurfaced.
Eyes on Brisbane
The second Test, a pink-ball fixture in Brisbane on December 4, now carries added weight. England must regroup swiftly and rediscover their edge before Australia tighten their grip on the urn.
McCullum, though, remains unwavering.
“We have to stay calm, stay together, and plot our way back. This team has shown before that we can respond.”
Bazball, bruised but unbroken, marches on.



















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