Despite England's humbling defeat to West Indies at Headingley, head coach Trevor Bayliss has suggested they may be closer to settling a couple more names for this winter's Ashes party. Half-centuries from Mark Stoneman and Dawid Malan were ultimately in a losing cause but the grit shown by both during England's second innings earned praise from Bayliss ahead of a final audition in the third Investec Test at Lord's.
England have deployed a revolving cast of characters worthy of a soap opera - old favourites, new faces - in their top order over recent years, although selection for the Test side is a much more sober business than during the 1980s and '90, as demonstrated by Tom Westley retaining his place in the squad for Lord's.
Since the end of the previous Ashes, 18 different batsmen - excluding the bottom six in this list - have been tried in the top seven, with only Alastair Cook, Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow secure in their positions (and Moeen Ali currently fulfilling his auxiliary role at No. 8). Of the others, only Keaton Jennings has managed a century and just two - Haseed Hameed and Ian Bell - averaged more than 30.
Stoneman replaced Jennings at the start of the series against West Indies, becoming Cook's 12th opening partner since the retirement of Andrew Strauss in 2012, and made 52 in his third innings - a composed knock in which he batted on after suffering a dislocated finger, leading Bayliss to describe him as a "tough type of player". Malan, meanwhile, scored his second half-century in consecutive Tests, having grafted against type for 186 deliveries.
Bayliss' admission that he has "fingers crossed for them" is reflective of a patchy track record in Tests since joining the selection panel after his appointment in 2015 and there are still several rounds of the Championship remaining in which players - such as Lancashire's Liam Livingstone, who scored a career-best double-hundred on Tuesday - could come to the fore. While Westley's position at No. 3 remains less certain, Bayliss was optimistic Stoneman and Malan would present strong cases to be in Australia.
"We hope so. This last Test match will be another opportunity for them to really nail it down," Bayliss said. "They have started to look comfortable and they can both play off the back foot so the signs are looking good. But, as you know, we've said that before and we've had a change after a few more matches. I still have fingers crossed for them.




