BBC Online :
Head Coach Brendon McCullum said England are unlikely to make changes to their batting line-up for the crucial third Ashes Test in Adelaide, which begins on Wednesday.
England, 2-0 down after the first two Tests, must beat Australia at the Adelaide Oval to keep their hopes of regaining the Ashes alive.
Number three Ollie Pope and wicketkeeper Jamie Smith may have been candidates to be left out if England had considered making changes.
But asked if he anticipated fielding the usual top seven, McCullum said: “I would have thought so. “We’ve been in positions where we have made some mistakes, and that can happen at times. But for us to go on and win this series, it’s not about throwing out what has been successful for us over the last few years. It’s about having more conviction.
“Knee-jerk reactions and chopping and changing settled batting line-ups is not really our way.” It is unusual for McCullum to address the media before a Test, and he explained his appearance on Sunday was because “we know where we are in the series”.
All-rounder Will Jacks was chosen ahead of Bashir in Brisbane, though captain Ben Stokes insisted Bashir remains England’s first-choice spinner.
The 22-year-old was earmarked for this trip more than a year ago, but has not played a Test since July because of a broken finger and has figures of 2-266 from his two tour games in Australia.
Tongue would be the most likely candidate to come in if England want a new paceman, with Gus Atkinson possibly making way.
“We need to have a look at the conditions,” McCullum told BBC Sport. “We have a squad of 16 here, which in a five-Test series, we know we will have to call upon the majority if not all of those.
“We will work out what we think is the best option to be successful in these conditions.”
Heavy defeats on Ashes tours have often brought changes to England regimes.
This series was billed as a huge opportunity for England to win back the urn, yet the tourists are at risk of being out of the series at the earliest possible opportunity.
Though McCullum and Stokes are contracted to England until the end of the next home Ashes in 2027, their positions – along with that of director of cricket Rob Key – will come in for intense scrutiny if England are beaten in Adelaide.
Asked if a loss would put his job under pressure, McCullum said: “I don’t know, but it doesn’t really bother me, to be honest.
“I certainly don’t coach to protect the job. I coach to get the best out of people and that’s the same with the skipper. We both go about that in our same way with the same level of conviction and that won’t be changing this week just because the prize is at its highest.
“I firmly believe that if we play our best cricket, we are a massive chance in this Test match. If we do that, then the narrative changes and the series momentum changes.”
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