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Harry Brook admits execution lapse after ‘shocking shots’
By SMCS - Dec 15, 2025 2:15 pm
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Harry Brook admitted that the first two Test matches of the Ashes series hadn’t gone to plan for him, stating that his usually sharp feel for tempo and situation had deserted him at important moments. He also said that he has struggled to hit the right balance between absorbing pressure and forcing the issue.

Harry Brook
Harry Brook

“It hasn’t been an ideal series,” he said two days out from the Adelaide Test. “Sometimes, I’ve got to rein it in a little bit: learn when to absorb the pressure a little bit more, and realise when the opportunity arises to put the pressure back on them. I feel like I haven’t done that as well as I usually do. I just haven’t identified those situations well enough.”

“Most of the time when I’ve been overly aggressive is when we’ve lost early wickets and I’ve tried to counter-punch and put them back under pressure. I tried to do that in Perth in the first innings: I played quite nicely and gloved down the leg side,” he added.

“I try to read situations as well as possible, and then it all depends on my execution. And so far [in this series], my execution hasn’t been as good as it has been at the start of my career. They were shocking shots,” Brook added. “I’ll admit that every day of the week, especially that one in Perth: it was nearly a bouncer and I tried to drive it. It was just bad batting. The one in Brisbane, I’ve tried to hit for six.”

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Those moments, Harry Brook felt, illustrated the need for greater restraint and an ability to trust rotation rather than forcing big shots.

“That’s what I mean when I try to say that I need to rein it in a little bit. I can almost just take that and hit it for one and get down the other end. Whoever else is in with me at the other end can just get on strike and just keep trying to rotate. I’ll be the first person to stand up and say that they were bad shots. I don’t regret them, but if I was there again, I would try and play it slightly differently.”

england
England team

“You can’t take this bowling attack lightly: they very rarely miss,” he said. “You’ve got to try and create your own bad balls. Doing that might be me running down; it might be me changing my guard or whatever. Look, they don’t miss often and you’ve got to tip your hat to them sometimes. They’ve bowled really well in this series.”

“He can kill teams with a whisper,” Root said on the Sky Sports Cricket podcast. “Harry Brook is a generational player, and he is going to deliver at some point in this series. You watch out. He is a match-winner. If he gets himself in and set at some point in this series, he’s going to go and do something very special for us.”

However, Joe Root compared Brook’s ability to influence games to that of Kevin Pietersen as well.

“It’s a bit like Pietersen. He does things that other players can’t do. That’s the reason why he averages 55, and why he’s done so many special things in his short career until now: because of his mind, and the way that he reads the game,” he shared.

“We tried to stay away from cricket as much as possible. We just wanted to go there and have a good time,” he said. “We had a belting time, and it probably came at the right time when we’re two-nil down. I know most people won’t think that, but to get away from the game and try to refresh as much as possible after a tough start to the series, hopefully that can help us leading into this game.”