‘I’ll Do It!’ — The Shock Call That Destroyed England’s Ashes Plans

Travis Head has played whirlwind knocks before, but the 123 he blasted in Perth during a tense Ashes chase stands apart as something altogether different. It wasn’t just the strike-rate, nor the fact that it came in the fourth innings of a two-day Test. This was the moment Head’s quiet preparation for a new role aligned perfectly with an opportunity on the biggest stage—and he seized it with devastating authority.

For months, Head had subtly floated the idea of opening the batting. With David Warner’s retirement creating a vacancy, various combinations were discussed within the leadership group. Yet Head kept planting the seed. He reminded coaches that he had opened successfully in white-ball formats and had even done it in Tests before, albeit briefly and mostly in subcontinental conditions.

He admitted after the match:
“I’ve always said that if the team needed me, I’d do it. The three-four-five structure with Marnus and Smith works well, but keeping the option open made sense.”

When Australia came off for Tea on Day 2 of the Perth Test, the calculations were brutal. A target of 205 on a tricky pitch. A match that had swung repeatedly. Usman Khawaja’s back troubles meant he could not open. Jake Weatherald desperately needed a steady partner. At one point, the possibility of sending Nathan Lyon to absorb the new ball was seriously discussed.

Before the idea could be formalised, Head stepped forward:
“I’ll do it. I should do it.”

That one sentence completely flipped the Test match.

According to captain Steve Smith:
“Heady just put his hand up. We were uncertain, and he simply said he’d take it on. The rest is one of the great Ashes innings.”

If the decision seemed spontaneous, the assurance behind it was anything but. Head felt the moment was right; the circumstances had aligned. His confidence was clear: he believed he could shoulder the responsibility.

Once the chase began, he started cautiously—3 runs off his first 14 balls—before unleashing a controlled storm. The strokes were crisp, the tempo rose naturally, and Weatherald grew in confidence from the other end. Their 75-run partnership steadied the innings and then opened the floodgates.

Head’s acceleration was extraordinary. He dismantled England’s attack—an attack that had terrorised Australia just 24 hours earlier. His century, reached in only 69 balls, transformed what looked like a tense, grinding pursuit into a one-session demolition.

After the match, Head reflected:
“Once we got to a 40–50 run partnership, it felt within reach. I trusted my process. For 30 balls, I just made sure I got everything right. After that, the game opened up.”

The early finish means Australia now disperse for a break before regrouping in Brisbane for the day-night Test. With Khawaja’s fitness uncertain and Head’s experiment proving spectacularly successful, pressure will mount to make the shift permanent. But Smith remains cautious:

“Let’s digest this first. The last few hours have been incredible. Too early to say anything yet.”

Brief Scorecard Table

TeamScenarioKey BatterKey Bowler
AustraliaChased 205Travis Head – 123
EnglandPreviously set totalArcher & pace attack

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