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Ashes 2017-18: our writers’ end-of-series awards

England and Australia jostle for the awards for best moment, match, and breakthrough player. Best player? Well, maybe the award should be renamedSteve Smith is a freak. To think he started the series with a supposed drought of international centuries having not raised the bat since March. This really is a special player we are watching. Adam Collins Related: Trevor Bayliss to stand down as England head coach at end of 2019 Ashes Related: Australia’s Steve Smith puts winning the Ashes in England on his bucket list | Adam Collins "The ball of the #Ashes.""Ball of the 21st century..."Mitchell Starc's delivery to dismiss James Vince impressed pretty much everyone in the cricket world... #ItsTheAshes pic.twitter.com/Gmbb1v6YOn Related: The Ashes 2017-18: England...

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Where do England go now? Maybe it is the turn of the selectors to feel the heat | Vic Marks

Joe Root and Trevor Bayliss safe despite Ashes humbling but selectors’ emphasis on character over record and a reluctance to shuffle the pack needs scrutinyIt has been gruelling for England’s players but they should not forget this Ashes tour in a hurry. Every humiliation, every defeat should be stored away.Remember it well: the preposterous head-butt, the missed opportunities such as Australia’s 209 for seven becoming 328 all out in Brisbane and England’s 368 for four becoming 403 all out in Perth, Steve Smith batting, the Marsh brothers reuniting, the bouncer barrage at the tail, Smith batting, left-handers groping against Nathan Lyon, the hashtag “Beat England” everywhere and repeated on our screens by prime minister Malcolm Turnbull one moment, Usain Bolt, even...

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Usman Khawaja: When I am scoring runs I’m elegant, when I’m not I’m lazy | Adam Collins

The Australia batsman fired back at the criticism that has dogged his Test career with a memorable first Ashes century, achieved in his home townLazy. Soft. Doesn’t care. Mark Waugh heard it all and more from the moment he came out of the Test cricket womb until his final Baggy Green breath. It drove him mad. “Why on Earth wouldn’t I do my best when there’s so much at stake?” he wrote before retiring. “I’ve carried that ‘casual, lazy’ tag for years, a bit like England’s David Gower. It just isn’t true.” Speaking a decade on from giving it all away, it still riled him. “I got pigeonholed,” he said. “But you don’t play 100 Tests if you’re not a...

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Australia’s Usman Khawaja plays it cagey in battle to preserve Test place | Adam Collins

Australia No3’s decision to replace the natural with the essential pays off as he approaches a maiden Ashes century in the fifth TestUsman Khawaja learned to bat within a cover drive of the SCG. There was a natural romance to his Test debut at the ground against England seven years ago. It inspired a bout of full-blown Usmania. The local newspaper devoted more pages than have ever been written about a knock of 37. His mum sat in the Members Stand praying for her boy’s success. The nation watched on in the belief that the stylish left-hander was a worthy find from Ashes rubble.It took five years for Usmania to come again. Between times he conceded there were moments when...

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England’s Mason Crane passes the Shane Warne test on Ashes debut | Ali Martin

The 20-year-old generated oohs and aahs from deliveries that troubled Australia’s batsmen and had Warne praising his line and ability to spin the ball hardThe second day of the fifth Ashes Test in Sydney was one of crisp blue skies and beautiful batting conditions, bringing with it a nagging sense of what might have been for England’s specialists after the previous evening’s two-wicket, nightwatchman-less cluster against the second new ball.Nevertheless, the tail wagged for the second Test in a row and 346 all out gave England a total from which they have never lost before at the SCG, even if we have learned over the last two winters that the current generation possess an ability to torch such statistical comforts...

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