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Home » To Big Bash and beyond: No rest for unbreakable Starc
Cricket

To Big Bash and beyond: No rest for unbreakable Starc

adminBy adminJanuary 9, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Starc, Smith hail ‘depth, fielding, experience’ key to series

The unbreakable Mitchell Starc is expected to be back bowling at the SCG a little more than a week after playing his fifth consecutive Ashes Test.

In the aftermath of his Compton-Miller Medal-winning campaign against England, Starc could now push on for next year’s tilt at this veteran Australian team’s final two bucket-list items: beating England and India away from home.

The left-armer’s staggering durability will be highlighted when he suits up for the Sydney Sixers – as soon as next Friday’s derby against the Thunder – in their push for an fourth KFC BBL title.

Starc sent down 153.1 overs in seven weeks against England, holding an average pace above 140kph throughout. Every comparable high-pace bowler on either side of the Ashes divide – teammates Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, along with England’s Jofra Archer, Gus Atkinson and Mark Wood – all failed to see out the series.

Mitchell Starc poses with the Compton–Miller Medal // Getty

That Scott Boland, whose 159.5 Ashes overs finished as the only tally greater than Starc’s, is expected to sit out the BBL to recover from the punishing workload only further underlines the medical marvel Starc has become.

Starc retired from international T20s in a bid to extend his Test and ODI careers, but has enough left in the tank to turn out for the remainder of the BBL, which will hold its final five days before his 36th birthday.

“I’m certainly not looking two years down the road just yet,” Starc said while sitting next to fill-in Test captain Steve Smith, another Sixers gun who could feature for the club as soon as Sunday’s clash with Hobart Hurricanes.

“(I’ll) pull on the magenta with the man next to me, see if we can help (the Sixers) get to another final.

“Part of the reason I gave away the T20 stuff, was trying to prolong my Test career. I feel like I can get some opportunities to put some time back in my body. That’s obviously paid off this series.

“It’s not always the case, but I feel like on the last day of a five-Test series, I’ve felt in worse condition than I have this series.

“So that means that the stuff I’ve been doing off the field is a good thing.”

Outside Boland, Travis Head and Cameron Green were the only other Test squad members not expected to feature in the BBL season’s climax. Both those players are keys cogs in the Aussies’ T20 World Cup campaign in the subcontinent next month.

Starc’s long-term hope of making it through to next year’s marathon sequence of major events – the Aussies tour India and England either side of a possible third consecutive World Test Championship final appearance, while also then defending their ODI World Cup title – would leave him as Australia’s oldest frontline Test paceman since the 1960s.

Questions over how this Test side can regenerate over the coming years are inevitable given the age profile of their main contributors this summer.

The retirement of 39-year-old Usman Khawaja opens up a middle-order spot for when Australia play against Bangladesh in the Top End in August, though they could be welcoming back another veteran nearing 40 if Nathan Lyon (38) recovers from his hamstring injury.

Australia’s three frontline bowlers in Sydney – Starc, Boland (36) and Michael Neser (35) – are all over 35, while Smith (35) and Alex Carey (34) are no spring chickens either. Josh Hazlewood (35) is another who will be back in the mix later in the year.

“This group has shown that whilst there’s so much made about our age profile, at times through this series that experience has been a really good thing,” said Starc.

“We’ve seen guys prove that if you’re still playing your role or if you’re still good enough, it shouldn’t matter how old you are.

“Our group do that really well and tailor programs or preparation for that – and we’ve seen the results this year.”

In the pink! Starc claims another big haul

Winning four Tests out of five this summer certainly adds clout to Starc’s argument, leaving the distinct possibility Australia will boast an ever older playing group by the time they embark on their 2027 missions.

Smith will turn 38 ahead of next year’s Ashes tour, while Starc will be 37 by the time Australia leave for an equally gruelling five-Test tour of India before that. Series draws in England in 2019 and 2023 have been the best the pair have managed in England, while neither has won a series in India.

“It’s something that was always on my bucket list. I would love to have won in India and England, they’re the two big away tours for us as Australians,” said Smith.

“Whether I’ll be there or not … I’m not sure. We’ll see. I’ll take it day by day, game by game. One day I might wake up and say I’ve had enough, but we’ll see.”

Added Starc: “I’d love to go. We’ve had two really good chances in England to win. We have retained (the Ashes) … it’d love to tick off (wins in India and England) but we’ve got plenty of cricket before then.”

2025-26 NRMA Insurance Men’s Ashes

First Test: Australia won by eight wickets

Second Test: Australia won by eight wickets

Third Test: Australia won by 82 runs

Fourth Test: England won by four wickets

Fifth Test: Australia won by five wickets

Australia squad (fifth Test): Steve Smith (c), Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Todd Murphy, Michael Neser, Jhye Richardson, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster

England squad: Ben Stokes (c), Harry Brook (vc), Shoaib Bashir, Jacob Bethell, Brydon Carse, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Matthew Fisher, Will Jacks, Ollie Pope, Matthew Potts, Joe Root, Jamie Smith (wk), Josh Tongue



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