It was the Ashes that provided us with one of those days when everything seemed almost unbalanced, and in the very heart of the hurricane was Mitchell Starc. The moment he hit his groove, the game spun like a loose ceiling fan in late May. According to sources, this was the highest number of wickets in a day on Australian soil in half a century—cricket’s version of rush-hour traffic, except everyone kept crashing.
England’s first innings lasted only 197 balls. That is not a batting effort; that is a power cut. Both sides even managed to lose their openers for zero, a historic first that felt less like sport and more like performance art.
Mitchell Starc And the Seven-Wicket Mayhem
You know a bowler is locked in when even the commentators stop breathing. His 7/58 shattered the Perth Stadium record and elbowed aside memories of Mohammed Shami’s earlier effort. The sheer velocity of the spell felt like he was speed-running cricket on a gaming console.
Mitchell Starc Hits the Hundred wicket wall like it owes him some money.
He was the first left arm seamer to reach the Ashes 100 wicket peak, and he did it in close to McGrath pace. It was only one man–that one–who made the milestone in less time. The ball count? A frenetic 4488. Blink and you’d miss a milestone.
Author’s Opinion: Mitchell Starc Made Bowling Look Like Stand-Up Comedy
This was cricket stripped of glamour and reduced to pure chaos. Watching the ball hoop, dip, and detonate stumps was like witnessing a prank gone too far. And honestly? I loved every minute. The day felt unfiltered, raw, old-school—exactly the kind of thing the game needs to wake itself up.
Mitchell Starc And Stokes: When Duel Becomes Theatre
Ben Stokes’ 36-ball fifer added slapstick balance to the drama. Two bowlers from rival camps ripping through the day like it was a clearance sale—this hasn’t happened since 2005, according to sources.
If this is the series’ opening statement, buckle up. The scriptwriters are clearly caffeinated.