England skipper ‘sound asleep’ during Ashes thrashing!

Joe Root wasn't even awake after the tourists finished their Test series against Australia 4-0. But there was a reason...


Joe Root ended his troubled Ashes tour of Australia sound asleep as England surrendered to a 4-0 series loss in Sydney on Monday.

The young England captain finished the demanding five-Test series debilitated by a stomach bug which flared overnight and sent him to hospital.

Root could not resume batting at the start of the final day, but came to the crease an hour in when Moeen Ali was dismissed and batted to lunch.

He could not continue after the break as England slumped to a crushing innings defeat and missed the post-match presentations, with vice-captain James Anderson speaking on his behalf.

“He was up all night with some sort of stomach bug, some gastro thing. He is asleep in the dressing-room trying to recover,” Anderson told reporters.

“He’s not had any sleep, he’s not eaten. He’s had diarrhoea and vomiting, so I’m guessing he’s not in a great state at the minute,” the paceman added.

“So to get to the ground in itself is a great effort and then to strap his pads on and bat for as long as he did was a brilliant effort from him and just shows what sort of character he is.”

Veteran Anderson praised Root’s leadership on a troubled tour plagued by off-field distractions and the unavailability of suspended star allrounder Ben Stokes.

“He wants to lead by example for this team. He’s been a fantastic captain throughout this tour,” Anderson said.

“You ask any captain that has toured Australia it is not an easy place to come, not an easy place to play, especially when you’re on the wrong end of results.”

Root finished retired ill on 58 for his fifth half-century of the series, but crucially he was not able to convert any into a Test ton.

He finished the series with 378 runs in nine innings at 47.25, the highest average of his team.

Australian captain Steve Smith praised Root’s efforts to try and save the Test for England on a testing final day.

“It took a lot of courage to come out and bat, you could see he was struggling a fair bit, particularly when he was running between wickets,” Smith said.

“He’s a tough character so he must have been in a pretty bad way not to come out after the break.”

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