First Ashes Test player ratings
Adelaide, South Australia
Before we begin, a new definition of awkward for you. Picture the scene. You've just boarded a flight from Brisbane to Adelaide, laptop open on your knees, a half-written Word document entitled 'Australia player ratings' on the screen. Clearly visible are phrases like "Michael Clarke: 2/10" and
With a two-hour flight ahead, you're intending to use the time to finish the piece off - but just as you settle into your seat, you notice some chaps in pale blue tracksuits coming down the aisle towards economy. It is the Australian cricket team. Leading the way are Clarke and Johnson.
One by one the seats fill up around you. On your immediate left, an inquisitive Clarke; directly in front of you, Simon Katich, Mike Hussey and Johnson; to your right, the team media manager; just behind you, able to see directly over your shoulder, Ricky Ponting and Brad Haddin. I'll be honest: I bottled it. You've never seen a laptop shut so fast.
ENGLAND
Andrew Strauss: 7
England's skipper described his dismissal for a duck to the third ball of the series as "one of the worst feelings I've ever had on a cricket pitch". and helped his side salvage a draw from a position that appeared hopeless. In the field, he was his usual steady self; in his media appearances, a beacon of calm in an unsteady sea of hype and excitement.
Alastair Cook: 10
Came into the Test with an Ashes average of 26 from 19 innings and with question marks over his technique and form. Left with an aggregate of 302 runs and a great heap of batting records stashed in his kit bag. Even in a game when one player took a hat-trick and another made a wonderful 195,
Jonathan Trott: 8
Scratchy in the first innings and out to a horrible wide-gated drive across the line, he dug in alongside Cook in the second to score his second Ashes ton in successive matches and take England from the edge of defeat to a position of total dominence. Has the best average of a recognised England number three in memory and has made his own a position that has been a problem for years.
Kevin Pietersen: 6
Played beautifully for 43 in the first innings, looking utterly dominant. But that's the issue. He only made 43 when there appeared no reason why he shouldn't have gone on to score a big hundred. Ambled around in the field missing the limelight as England bowled and was then forced to sit with his pads on for more than a day as all three batsmen above him compiled centuries in that record-breaking second innings. Needs more in Adelaide - and wants it desperately.