Caught in a defensive mindset, can Jos Buttler cast off his Test shackles?

Recalled in 2018 to transform the No.7 role, England’s wicketkeeper has lost his sense of purpose

Matt Roller22-Jan-2020Scrawled on the top of Jos Buttler’s bat handle is a small message that reads: “F*** IT”. It’s not simply another example of his potty mouth, but instead “something that reminds me of what my best mindset is – when I’m playing cricket, and probably in life as well”.”That is the thing I can always come back to, whether it is about committing to a shot or about getting out first ball,” he told in a 2018 interview. “I think it keeps cricket in a really good perspective for me, where it lands in the scheme of life. If you pick up a paper and start from the front, by the time you get to the sports pages you realise getting out for a duck is not the be-all and end-all.”When Buttler won a recall to the Test set-up in 2018, emerging from the rubble left by the disastrous 2017-18 Ashes tour thanks to his stellar run in the IPL, Ed Smith explained his selection by suggesting he would “bring a new flavour” to England’s order as a specialist batsman slotting in at No. 7.”Who could do that job in a way that was unique, in a way that really brought a different dimension to the whole batting order? The panel decided that Jos Buttler fitted that role perfectly,” Smith said. “The message to Jos from everyone around the table was to play his way, to play with the confidence and the flair that he’s capable of batting with, and the skill and the decision-making.”In other words, Buttler had the licence to ‘f*** it’.Initially, everything clicked. He scored freely in his second game back to make an unbeaten 80 off 101 balls against Pakistan at Headingley, following that with scores of 106 (his maiden Test ton), 69 and 89 in the four-match series against India and scoring fluently in Sri Lanka.In his first year back, Buttler was averaging 40.78 while scoring with a strike rate of 64.07. Without quite seeming to reach the ceiling his obvious talents hinted at, it was an impressive return for a batsman whose performances had come in relatively low-scoring series, emphasised by the fact no Englishman made more runs in that time.ESPNcricinfo LtdBut since the start of last summer’s Ashes series, Buttler’s returns have dipped markedly. In his last nine Tests, he averages just 22.17, with his 70 at The Oval his only half-century. In that time, his strike rate has dipped to 50.40.Analysing his dismissals paints something of a surprising picture, too. According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball records, he has been out ‘defending’ four times, ‘leaving’ twice, and on three further occasions has been dismissed without looking to score: chipping Josh Hazlewood to short cover at Headingley, edging a back-of-a-length ball from Vernon Philander behind at Centurion, and chipping a return catch to Keshav Maharaj at Port Elizabeth.All told, that means that nine of his 17 dismissals have come without him looking to score. The indication is that rather than falling to reckless, overly-attacking shots, Buttler has found himself torn between aggression and defence.Consider, for example, his dismissal at Mount Maunganui in the second innings, when he shouldered arms to an off-stump yorker from Neil Wagner, delivered from round the wicket. In a one-day game, there is little doubt that Buttler would have squeezed the ball out towards cover point or look to muscle it through mid-on, but uncertainty over his defensive game resulted in him leaving a straight ball.Buttler was bowled without playing a shot in the second innings at Mount Maunganui•Getty ImagesLast week’s Port Elizabeth Test provided him with the perfect platform. Walking in at 351 for 5 – the highest first-innings total when he has arrived at the crease since his recall – Buttler should have been ideally suited to moving the game on, counterattacking after South Africa had put the squeeze on Ben Stokes’ scoring after lunch. Instead, he struggled to adjust to the pace of the wicket, and chipped a return catch to Maharaj playing a nothing shot on 1 from 15 balls. The innings played by Sam Curran (44 off 50 balls) and Mark Wood (42 off 23) coming in lower down the order served to highlight Buttler’s struggle.In isolation, there is an obvious pattern, which points to a player whose runs have dried up. But there is a further problem for Buttler: the lack of clarity he has been given over his role.Smith’s comments regarding his recall made clear that with England’s wealth of allrounders, he felt they could afford to create a totally new role, practically unheard of in recent Test history: a specialist No. 7 batsman, given freedom to attack.But since then, Buttler has moved up and down the order almost constantly; in 17 innings since the start of the Ashes, his batting position has changed ten times. In the last two years, he has been a wicketkeeping No. 6 and No. 7, a specialist batsman everywhere from No. 5 to No. 7 (and even No. 8, accounting for nightwatchmen), and having been vice-captain in the India series two years ago, his place appears to be one of the most vulnerable in the side.Part of that is down to the fact that England have been, by the admission of most senior figures at the ECB, a side in transition for the last two years. In Antigua last year, Buttler batted at No. 5, with Stokes, Moeen Ali, Ben Foakes and Curran the men in next; this winter, he has regularly been at No. 7 with one allrounder and three bowlers below him.