That, in turn, means England, unlike other teams, have been winning a lot of Tests even when their batters have returned lower control percentages than their opponents. In 13 such Tests, they have won eight, lost four, and drawn one. Compare that with the results for all the other teams when they have returned lower control percentages: five wins, 28 defeats. England’s win-loss ratio in such matches: 2.00; the win-loss ratio for all other teams: 0.179. That’s a factor of 11.2. Perhaps no other metric illustrates more effectively just how different England’s approach to Test cricket has been when compared to other teams in the last 14 months.For comparison, in the period between January 2018 and May 2022, England had a 10-14 win-loss record in Tests when they had a lower control percentage than their opponents. That was still better than the overall 37-91 record for all teams in this period, but nowhere near the winning ratio they have racked up over the last year.

How is it that England have been winning despite lower control numbers?The key to answer that question is to not just look at the balls when their batters played false shots, but also at the outcomes when they were in control. England’s ultra-aggressive approach ensures that they try to maximise the runs they can score off deliveries that they are on top of: their strike rate off in-control deliveries is a whopping 84.16, compared to 54.71 by the opposition. (Their strike rates when playing false shots is also better than all other teams, but we’ll come to that a little later.) This huge difference in strike rates compensates for the slightly lower control percentage – 78.59 to 82.29 – in these 18 Tests. In other words, the runs they score when in charge makes up for the excess risk they seemingly take in playing that brand of cricket.That is best illustrated by looking at the total runs scored (off all deliveries faced, including the in-control balls) per false shot played. To calculate this, we divide the total bat runs scored by a team off all deliveries, by the total number of false shots (or not-in-control balls). So, if a team scores 300 bat runs in an innings and plays 100 false shots, their runs scored per false shot is three.In these 18 Tests, that figure for England is 3.56; for their opponents, it is 2.94. Given that the ultimate aim in all cricket matches – even Tests – is to score more runs than the opposition, this shows England are actually managing their risk better than the opposition by getting more value per false shot. Coincidentally, in Crawley’s 189, his runs per false shot was 3.57 (189 runs, 53 false shots), which almost exactly matches England’s number in their last 18 Tests. Talk about following the Bazball template to the T!

Because of this approach, even when their batters commit errors, they mostly do so when attempting to score runs. Only 25.4% of their total false shots have come when playing defensively; the rest have come about when trying to look for runs. That is a much lower percentage than for most other teams: Sri Lanka and New Zealand are within ten percentage points, but for most of the other top teams, this percentage is over 40, which indicates a larger chunk of errors happen when not looking for runs.

It is not surprising, therefore, that England’s batting strike rate of 46.79 for not-in-control deliveries since the beginning of June 2022 is the highest among all teams during this period. Australia are third at 39.64, about 15% lower than England, while India (36.52), Pakistan (35.72) and South Africa (35.49) are all in the mid-30s.The other aspect of attacking batting is the effect it has on the opposition think-tank and their strategies. Unless the opposition have plenty of runs to play with or the conditions are extremely bowler-friendly, a flurry of boundaries forces the field to spread out, leaving fewer fielders in catching positions to snaffle the genuine edges.The number of false shots played per dismissal is a fair indication of how many errors batters get away with, due to various reasons. In the period since June 2022, England have lost a wicket every 10.95 false shots, which is second only to New Zealand’s 11.21, and higher than the corresponding number for Australia (10.73), India (9.97), South Africa (9.23) and Pakistan (8.47). In Ashes 2023, England lost a wicket every 11.5 false shots and scored 3.1 runs per false shot, compared to 10.67 and 2.87 for Australia. The combination of a relatively high runs per false shot and false shots per dismissal means England score more runs per dismissal, which almost always is the formula to winning Test matches.

All of this suggests that while England’s approach looks risky with higher false-shots numbers – mostly attempting non-defensive shots – than you’d normally associate with a winning team, they make those risks work in their favour. For any other team, these control percentages would probably not lead to consistently winning matches, but it works for England, because of their drastically different approach to batting.It’s a fine balance, and one that requires a sensible approach to aggression, but so far England have managed to find that balance more often than not. The 13-4 win-loss is a strong testament to that.

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