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England’s aggressive batting approach is nothing new in and tactics will work more often that not

The phrase Bazball is one Brendon McCullum doesn’t care for and before this series it seemed as though Dean Elgar wasn’t keen on it either.

Yes, England will come unstuck playing this brand of cricket, as we saw yesterday, but monumental blocking doesn’t get you very far either. England’s tactics will work more often than not…not that scoring rapidly is new in Test cricket. When I was England coach I would speak to my Australian counterparts who wanted to get them as quickly as possible so they had time to take 20 wickets.

It’s the same thing now, only Australia had two of the great bowlers in Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath to help make it work.

Ollie Pope epitomised England's new batting approach with a solid batting display at Lords

Ollie Pope epitomised England’s new batting approach with a solid batting display at Lords

It was fascinating listening to Sir Andrew Strauss on the rise of franchise cricket on Test Match Special. He was passionate about the future and admitted he won’t please everyone with his high performance review. But one thing struck me. He said the domestic structure in England should mirror the international game. So where does the Hundred fit in? We’re the only country who play it….

So over to you Richard Thompson, new chair of the ECB. He’s an excellent man and will need to appoint an excellent new chief executive, too. For me Richard Gould is the man. The pair were successful at Surrey and could sort our game out. I’m not all doom and gloom about the future yet, but I have started to worry.

An update on the bell ringing in my village. There’s clearly a knack to it. You have to get it swinging before you dong it. I’ve had one lesson from our leader Romford Kenny and I’ve been put on the No 3 bell, where I’ve been booked to make my debut in a blessing on Saturday. As the debonair Leslie Phillips (left) once said: ‘Ding dong!’

South Africa bowler Kagiso Rabada took two wickets on the opening day of the test at Lords

South Africa bowler Kagiso Rabada took two wickets on the opening day of the test at Lords 

Before DRS, Joe Root would have got the benefit of the doubt over his lbw. The umpire would say: ‘It’s close, might have clipped leg stump, but I can’t be sure so it’s not out.’ Now we are trying to back the umpires so he’s gone. It’s tough and I wouldn’t have liked that decision, but if HawkEye is 100 per cent accurate it’s out. 

It quickly became clear on day one what a potent attack South Africa have. They’ve got big strapping lads capable of real pace, and variation in the form of left-armer Marco Jansen. What a handful he is at 6ft 8in. Both teams have strong attacks and long tails. That means, if the rain stays away, we will have three short Tests.