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    England to stick with same batting line-up for third Test despite recent Ashes woes

    Join the Miguel Delaney Inside Football Join the Miguel Delaney Inside newsletter to get exclusive access and unparalleled insight. Football NewsletterJoin the Miguel Delaney inside Football newsletterEngland head coach Brendon McCullum is ready to roll out an unchanged batting line-up for this week’s crunch Ashes Test in Adelaide, insisting he will not be swayed by questions over his future.At 2-0 down with three to play, England cannot afford another slip-up if they are to win the Ashes but they are set to give their error-prone top seven another chance.Ollie Pope, who averages 18.71 in 14 innings against Australia with a top score of 46, looked most vulnerable to a challenge from Jacob Bethell but McCullum spoke strongly in favour of retaining the status quo.Pope duly took his place in the catching cordon as England returned to practice for the first time since losing in Brisbane a week ago, indicating that he would hold the spot.Asked if there would be changes in the batting group after some costly collapses, McCullum said: “I wouldn’t have thought so. Knee-jerk reactions and chopping and changing settled batting line-ups is not really our way.“We know we haven’t got enough runs so far in this series 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.“It’s about making sure we have our plans and our disciplines around it just screwed down a touch more. Making sure when we walk out there we have utter belief in what we are capable of achieving.”Defeat in South Australia would end England’s hopes of reclaiming the urn in brutally premature fashion, the kind of result that turns up the heat on those in charge.open image in galleryEngland head to Adelaide knowing they must win if they hope to regain the Ashes (Getty Images)McCullum was unmoved by the suggestion that his job could be on the line in the coming weeks and claimed insulating himself from scrutiny was not a motivating factor in decisions.“I don’t know, but it doesn’t really bother me to be honest,” he said.“Professional sport, it’s not easy and you do the job to the best of your ability. 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…

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    2025-12-14 08:52:26

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