Jonny Bairstow believes he is in the best form of his career after being handed an England recall ahead of the third Test against Australia at Edgbaston in Birmingham, England, on Wednesday next week.
Bairstow has been picked in place of dropped county teammate Gary Ballance after making five hundreds for reigning champions Yorkshire in the County Championship, where he averages more than 100 so far this season.
England have suffered a series of top-order collapses in recent matches and they could not get themselves out of trouble in the second Test at Lord’s in London, where Australia won by a crushing 405 runs to level the series at 1-1.
Bairstow, the son of late former England wicketkeeper David Bairstow, now has a chance to improve on a modest Test average of 26.95 in 14 matches, the last against Australia in Sydney last year when an England defeat meant they suffered a 5-0 Ashes whitewash.
However, he made a match and series-winning 83 not out against New Zealand in a one-day international at Chester-le-Street last month.
“I am very pleased to have been called up,” Bairstow, set to bat at No. 5 for England, said on Tuesday after being included in a 13-man Test squad.
“Consistency-wise, I think I am in my best form and striking the ball well, and hopefully this will continue,” he said.
“Playing international cricket is a great challenge, but that is why we play the game,” Bairstow said.
“If you don’t challenge yourself you will never find anything out about yourself,” he added.
Bairstow’s previous stints in international cricket have seen questions raised over his ability to play short-pitched bowling — something he is sure to face from the likes of Australia’s Mitchell Johnson, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood.
However, Yorkshire coach Jason Gillespie, a former Australia fast bowler, said Bairstow was now a much-improved batsman.
“It is important that those people who don’t watch much county cricket don’t pipe up with opinions based on his past experience in Test cricket, because we’re talking about a different beast right now,” Gillespie wrote in his Guardian column.
Ballance has an impressive average of nearly 48 in his 15-Test career, but the left-hander has struggled this season, with only 134 runs in eight Test innings against New Zealand and Australia.
The 25-year-old scored three hundreds and two half-centuries in his first 10 innings for England, but has found scores harder to come by of late.
“He has scored a heck of a lot of runs over a short period of time, but it is just one of those disappointing things and, hopefully, I will be able to get in and score runs,” Bairstow, also 25, said of Ballance.
“I have been very positive at the crease this season and will try and take that into the Ashes series,” he said.
“You cannot say how you will play until you are there, but I will certainly relish the challenge,” Bairstow added.
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