Stuart Broad's latest match-winning spell saw England to a 74-run win in the fourth Test at Chester-le-Street yesterday as Australia, set 299 for victory, lost their last nine wickets for just 77 runs in a dramatic final session that saw them collapse to 224 all out with more than a day to spare.
Victory left England, who'd already retained the Ashes, an unassailable 3-0 up heading into the fifth and final Test at The Oval in south London starting on August 21.
And the last time Australia, ended an Ashes campaign, as opposed to one-off matches against their oldest foes, 'winless' was when Greg Chappell's side lost a five-match contest 3-0 in England in 1977, the final series before the Australian game was briefly split apart by Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket.
"Nine wickets in a session, the crowd, the excitement and the nerves at the beginning. It was the moment," Cook said as he savoured the joy of overseeing England's third successive Ashes series win over Australia.
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"We are going to get greedy and try and repeat that at The Oval, but we can think about that with sore heads tomorrow (Tuesday)," he added.
The 27-year-old may blow hot and cold but, as his Nottinghamshire and England team-mate Graeme Swann, who took the first two Australian wickets to fall Monday, observed: "When he's hot, he's 'surface-of-the-sun' hot."
In 2009, Broad steered England to Ashes glory in similar style at The Oval and in May he produced another stunning spell of seven for 44 as New Zealand, shot out for 68, were thrashed by 170 runs at Lord's.