The spectre of Nathan Lyon and England's horror 2017-18 Ashes tour is providing an unwelcome distraction for Moeen Ali during England's stalled World Cup campaign
Moeen haunted by Ashes flashbacks on World Cup tour
England allrounder Moeen Ali has admitted to unwelcome flashbacks of the 2017-18 Ashes on his return to Australia – but he hopes to create more positive memories at this T20 World Cup.
On his previous tour to Australia, Moeen was England's frontline spinner but took just five wickets in as many Tests at an eye-watering average of 115, having been hampered by a lingering finger injury.
Moeen also failed to reach fifty as England slid to another heavy series defeat and he did not fare much better in the ODI series that followed, but there have been encouraging signs on his latest trip.
England's quest to unify cricket's two major limited-overs trophies has faltered in recent days and Moeen is wary of matters worsening as he looks to banish his unpleasant recollections of Australia.
"I think about that Ashes series and about every ground we go to now, obviously the Test grounds we played at," Moeen said, ahead of England travelling to Brisbane on Saturday.
"And I think, 'this is where this happened and this is where this happened, and actually I shouldn't have played that game because I had this problem'.
"It's almost parked in the back of my mind. It was a disaster of a tour and I don't even want to think about it.
"Not just personally but as a side we were terrible and the last two times we've been out here (England also lost the 2021-22 Ashes but Moeen had retired from Tests by then). I hope it won't happen again."
Moeen has not yet bowled – mainly due to England's opening two opponents Afghanistan and Ireland having right-handed heavy batting line-ups – but he has flickered in his middle-order role.
England likely need to win their last two Super 12s matches to stand the best chance of reaching the semi-finals.
England's batting, so often their biggest strength in white-ball cricket, has misfired so far, although Moeen believes he and his fellow big-hitters could now cast off the shackles without being reckless.
"We bat all the way down so we might as well entertain everybody, entertain ourselves and enjoy getting those 70s or 80s off 30 balls, whatever it is, as that's what really takes the game away," he said.
"We've just got to be brave. It doesn't mean going out and slogging but playing the way we can do and the reason why we were picked.
England could beat New Zealand on Tuesday and Sri Lanka on Saturday and still not go through as net run-rate will come into play to determine the top two in the group if sides cannot be split on points.
Moeen, though, is focused on what England can control, starting on Tuesday at the Gabba against the Black Caps, who eliminated them at the semi-final stage of this tournament 11 months ago.
"I wouldn't say it's unfinished business but they knocked us out last year and that hurt quite a bit," Moeen said.
"I can't remember playing New Zealand where we've played average and we've won. You always have to play your best cricket.
"We've got to win the two games but could still potentially miss out. Our job is to win those two games, and if we can, win them comfortably."