Joe Root defended England's management after their Ashes loss, calling changes "silly." He praised coach Brendon McCullum and captain Ben Stokes, highlighted player progress, and stressed building on the recent four-wicket win in Melbourne.

Veteran England batsman Joe Root has said it would be "silly" to change England's management team after losing the Ashes, with players "absolutely committed" to the current set-up.

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England meekly surrendered the famous urn after just 11 days of play, suffering back-to-back eight-wicket defeats in Perth and Brisbane, followed by an 82-run loss at Adelaide. Their capitulation was compounded by criticism of their low-key preparations and allegations of excessive drinking during a mid-series beach break in Noosa.

‘Management Work Extremely Hard’

The team restored some pride with a frantic four-wicket win in Melbourne, snapping an 18-match winless streak on Australian soil. It relieved pressure on coach Brendon McCullum, skipper Ben Stokes, and cricket chief Rob Key, who have all indicated they want to stay in their roles.

"In terms of the playing group, we're absolutely committed to the management," Root, England's all-time leading Test run-scorer and a former captain, told English media in Melbourne.

"Yes, we can be better and there are certain areas that we'll continue to keep working at, but the management work extremely hard. They might do things in a slightly different way, but I think we've made great strides as a group and a big reason for it is because of the guys we have behind us."

Joe Root Backs McCullum-led Management

Management's case to stay on would be strengthened by another win in the fifth Test in Sydney starting Sunday. Root was captain on England's last tour of Australia in 2021-22 when they were crushed 4-0, costing coach Chris Silverwood and cricket director Ashley Giles their jobs. But Root said a lot of progress had been made since under the current regime.

"You look at the group of players we've got and you look at the guys that were involved in the team when I was captain, four years ago, and you look at their records individually, and every single one of them has improved as a player," he said.

"This team has improved. I think it would be silly (to consider change) for the amount of hard work and things that have been done."

Victory in Melbourne was Root's first in Australia in more than a decade of trying, and he said it "would be better if we win next week as well."

"If we can build on it and do it again next time, it's momentum in the right direction for the next tour here (in 2029-30)," he added.