
For the first time in 24 years, the England cricket team will return from a tour of Australia still in possession of the Ashes. A win or a draw in the fifth and final Test in Sydney will ensure that they win the series as well – as they deserve to, after outplaying their opponents in every match except one. As David Cameron said yesterday, it is a welcome late Christmas present for the English supporters, and a testament to the preparedness and fitness of the team.
With the urn safe for another two years, England’s emphatic victory in Melbourne showed why it is now more an expectation than a hope that they can achieve the ultimate prize of actually winning an Ashes series in Australia by avoiding defeat in the last Test.
Without them, Tim Bresnan and Chris Tremlett would not have been able to perform at the war footing they did and ensure England did not suffer the loss of Stuart Broad and Steve Finn, the attacks enforcer and leading wicket-taker respectively.
After the humiliating 5-0 defeat inflicted on England the last time they toured Australia, this retention of the urn is sweet indeed – even if the opposition is no longer as formidable as it once was. It was a wonderful day, as well, for England's extraordinary band of travelling supporters, who have followed the team through thick and thin (with rather more of the latter than the former, as Jim White points out opposite). Even if the antics of the hard-core fans, known as the Barmy Army, divide opinion, at least they guaranteed a proper celebration – one we hope will be repeated in Sydney.