Former England great Geoffrey Boycott has once again shared strong views on Harry Brook’s approach to batting during the ongoing Ashes series in Australia. While Boycott remains confident in Brook’s immense potential, he has voiced concern over the Yorkshire batter’s lack of patience and repeated dismissals after promising starts.
Brook entered his maiden Ashes series carrying major expectations, seen as a crucial figure in England’s hopes of achieving a rare series victory in Australia. However, after three Test matches, England have already lost the series, with Brook managing only 173 runs across six innings at an average of 28. Despite being England’s second-highest run-scorer, his tendency to play risky shots at key moments has drawn criticism.
Boycott highlighted that Brook often bats like it is a limited-overs game, giving his wicket away unnecessarily. Referring to Sir Don Bradman, Boycott explained that aggressive scoring is not the issue, but intelligent shot selection and valuing one’s wicket are essential at Test level. He stressed that Brook does not need to abandon his natural flair, but must learn when to control his instincts.
The former opener warned that Brook’s habit of throwing away starts is wasting his extraordinary talent. According to Boycott, a player of Brook’s calibre should understand match situations better and show greater discipline, especially against high-quality bowling attacks.
As the Ashes series continues, Brook will have two more opportunities to prove that he can balance attacking cricket with responsibility. With England searching for positives in a tough tour, all eyes remain on whether the young batter can adapt and fulfil the promise many believe he holds.

