The allrounder was preferred ahead of Shoaib Bashir as England's only spinner for the day-night Test

Vithushan Ehantharajah

02-Dec-2025 • 3 hrs ago

Allrounder Will Jacks will make his first Test appearance in three years after leapfrogging Shoaib Bashir as England's

spinner for the second Ashes Test in Brisbane.

Jacks, a left-field pick for the tour of Australia, will replace fast bowler Mark Wood, who was ruled out through

injury. It will be the Surrey allrounder's third Test cap, having earned his first two in Pakistan in 2022, taking 6 for

161 on debut in the first Test in Rawalpindi.

The 27-year-old was one of multiple spinners on both those occasions but now finds himself not just thrust into an Ashes

with England 1-0 down, but as their primary spinner in the day-night Test, which begins on Thursday.

Jacks has played just five first-class matches in the last two seasons, and took just five wickets in three County

Championship appearances in 2025 at an average of 38.80. Should he pick up a wicket in the upcoming Test, it will be

only his 50th in first-class cricket since debuting in 2018.

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He has been used intermittently as a spinner in limited-overs cricket, with 50 caps across ODIs and T20Is with just nine

wickets. It helped his case for selection on the tour that he had spent the summer working with head coach Brendon

McCullum upon his return to the limited-overs set-up in May. Jacks was subsequently awarded a two-year central contract

in October.

"It's something I'm really looking forward to," told the ECB's in-house media. "To be on an Ashes tour in the first

place is something I wouldn't have been expecting a few months ago. But it's been amazing to be here, be around this

team… to be in the XI is a dream come true, to play an Ashes series away from home.

"Personally, I'll just be looking to add a little bit to the team in each three facets of the game. I know I can effect

the game in a positive way like that, and I'll just be doing my best to support whenever the team needs me.

"Obviously I play a lot of white ball cricket under lights and hopefully that will suit me and the conditions won't feel

too foreign to me. Mostly, I'm just looking forward to getting out there and trying to do my best."

Though primarily a tactical decision to opt for Jacks given he is a far superior batter to Bashir, it marks a

significant moment in the latter's career. Since becoming Ben Stokes' No.1 spinner from the start of the 2024 summer,

debuting in India earlier that year, this is the first time Bashir has been left out.

The 21-year-old missed the last two Tests against India this summer with a broken finger on his left hand, though he did

take the final wicket in a thrilling victory at Lord's having suffered the injury in the same game. That bravery further

enamoured him to Stokes, who has been Bashir's biggest advocate since spotting him two years ago on social media bowling

to Alastair Cook on first-class debut for Somerset against Essex.

He has since gone on to earn 19 caps, taking 68 wickets at 39.00 but is now without a county after his deal with

Somerset expired at the end of the season, though he is on a central contract. After making England's 12-man squad for

the first Test at Perth, Bashir now finds himself lower down in the pecking order.

Ironically, part of the attraction to Bashir is his high release point and the over-spin he imparts on the ball -

characteristics England deem vital in Australia based on Nathan Lyon's success. That Lyon boasts an impressive record

across his 13 day-night Tests - 43 dismissals at 25.62 - has prompted England into changing their all-pace tactic from

the first Test.

"Talking about the tactical element of a day-night game, you do try to look at Australia," Stokes said. "They play a lot

of day-night cricket here, how they use their spinner as an attacking option, or more to give the bowlers an easier

rotation and to get through the overs quicker to have more time with the new ball under lights. There's both those

elements we will consider with how a spinner is to be used in a day/night game."

England XI: 1 ⁠Zak Crawley, 2 ⁠Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 ⁠Harry Brook, 6 ⁠Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Jamie

Smith (wk), 8 Will Jacks, 9 Gus Atkinson, 10 ⁠Brydon Carse, 11 Jofra Archer

Vithushan Ehantharajah is an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo