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Stats: England end drought Down Under in the fourth-shortest Ashes Test

Roshan Gede 
josh-tongue-picked-seven-wickets-as-england-won-the-fourth-test
Josh Tongue picked seven wickets as England won the fourth Test ©Getty

All the stats highlights from a roller-coaster of a Test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

18 - England went without a win in 18 straight Tests in Australia post their 2010/11 series-clinching win in Sydney. They lost 16 and drew two thereafter, before completing a four-wicket win in Melbourne on Saturday. That's the joint-longest winless streak for any team in Australia.

Most consecutive Tests without a win in Australia

MatchesTeamTimeframe
18New ZealandDecember 1987 - December 2011
18EnglandNovember 2013 - December 2025
17West IndiesNovember 2000 - January 2024
17*PakistanNovember 1999 - present
15*Sri LankaFebruary 1988 - present

(The last two are ongoing streaks; Sri Lanka are yet to win a Test in Australia)

This was the first Test win for Joe Root in 18 Tests in Australia, and the first for Ben Stokes in 13 games.

3 - This was just the third defeat in 15 Boxing Day Tests for Australia since 2011, the previous two coming against India in 2018 and 2020 respectively. They won 10 of the other 12, while two ended in draws.

7 - The number of Ashes Tests that have ended within two days till date, the Melbourne Test being the second such game in the ongoing series, after the opener in Perth.

Ashes Tests ending inside two days

Lord's, 1888

The Oval, 1888

Manchester, 1888

The Oval, 1890

Nottingham, 1921 (excluding rest day)

Perth, 2025

Melbourne, 2025

852 balls in the Test made it the fourth-shortest completed Ashes game ever on that front, and the second-shortest since the start of the 20th century.

Shortest completed Ashes Tests

BallsVenueSeasonWinner
788Old Trafford1888England
792Lord's1888Australia
847Perth2025/26Australia
852Melbourne2025/26England
911Sydney1894/95Australia
1034Brisbane1950/51Australia

7 - This was the seventh Ashes Test in which the fourth innings score was the highest, and of those, this was the third that culminated in a successful run-chase after the famous finish at Headingley in 2019 and in Perth in the ongoing series opener. The other four matches were Sydney 1884/85, Trent Bridge 1930, Old Trafford 1972 and

It was the third such Test in Australia - wherein a team recorded the highest score in the fourth innings to win the Test - after South Africa'ssuccessful 414-run chase at the WACA, Perth in 2008 (the second-highest in the format) and the one at Optus last month.

572 runs totalled in the game is the third-highest ever in a Test match sans an individual 50-plus score. Travis Head (46) top-scored across the four team innings in the game.

500-plus Test match-aggregates without an individual 50-plus score

Match AggregateFixtureWinnerVenue, YearTop-scorer
787Australia vs EnglandEnglandEdgbaston, 1981Mike Brearley (48)
652India vs South AfricaIndiaNagpur, 2015Murali Vijay (40)
572Australia vs EnglandEnglandMelbourne, 2025Travis head (46)
539Australia vs EnglandEnglandSydney, 1887Dick Barlow (42*)
516West Indies vs AustraliaAustraliaKingston, 2025Steven Smith (48)
507New Zealand vs IndiaNew ZealandHamilton, 2002Rahul Dravid (39)

5.5 - England's run-rate in the fourth innings was the second-highest for a successful 150-plus run-chase in the Ashes, only behind 7.23 for Australia in Perth last month (which is also the overall record in Tests). It was the highest run-rate for any visiting team in a 150-plus chase in Australia, bettering 3.9 by the West Indies in Adelaide in 1972 (target: 236).

Highest run-rates in successful 150-plus chases in the Ashes

Run-rateTargetTeamVenue, Year
7.23205AustraliaPerth, 2025
5.5175EnglandMelbourne, 2025
5.38158AustraliaTrent Bridge, 2001
5.11168AustraliaAdelaide, 2006
5.08251EnglandHeadingley, 2023

284 - Australia's 284 (152 & 132) was their third-lowest Test match-aggregate in the 21st century, after 246 against South Africa in Hobart in 2016 and 268 against India in 2023. It also happened to be their lowest match aggregate in an Ashes Test post World War II, only higher than 282 and 283 at Headingley in 1972 and 1956 respectively.

Their 132 in the second dig was the joint-second lowest all-out innings total for them in an home Ashes Test since 2000, alongside as many in Perth last month and only higher than 98 in the 2010 Boxing Day Test.

Other major landmarks

3474 balls taken by Ben Duckett to get to 3000 Test runs, the second-fastest to the mark in terms of balls faced (where ball-by-ball data is available), after Harry Brook, who had got there in 3468 during his brisk 41 on Friday. Adam Gilchrist (3610), David Warner (4047), Rishabh Pant (4095) and Virender Sehwag (4129) follow the two England batters in this list.

Of the 348 batters with 2000-plus runs in Tests, Brook (86.85) and Duckett (86.44) have the highest strike-rates, followed by Tim Southee (82.68), Sehwag (82.23) and Gilchrist (81.95).

28.3 - Mitchell Starc's strike-rate in Tests in 2025 ranks the best for anyone with a minimum of 50 wickets in the format in a calendar year (108 instances).

Best bowling strike-rates in a calendar year in Tests (min. 50 wickets)

PlayerYearWicketsMatchesAveSR5WBBI
Mitchell Starc (AUS)2025551117.3228.337/58
Waqar Younis (PAK)199355715.2329.567/91
Jasprit Bumrah (IND)2024711314.9230.156/45
Gus Atkinson (ENG)2024521122.1535.637/45
Dale Steyn (SA)2008741320.0135.856/72
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