This is a really tricky one because we are discussing it five plus months out - though hey, we love a good selection debate, right?
My thoughts, rather unstructured, are as follows. We will go into the Ashes with our multi format players having played no more than two red ball games, one of which will be the banana skin test again Ireland. I would therefore, personally, want at least two batsmen who are NOT part of the one day party as well as the obvious bowlers who are not.
I don't think there are many who are nailed on certs at this stage in the eyes of the selectors. I would say Root, Stokes, Anderson and Broad are possibly the only four, with Buttler and Bairstow very strong probables. I think myself that Archer has to be in there too.
From that start, you have to structure a side. If Root were prepared to bat three, that'd be easy - but I don't sense that his objection to doing so is going to change, nor do I think that the more outre selections to open (I still think Buttler would have some merit, for example) will be considered. So, either Bairstow returns to three - which is one, possibly two places too high, as hard as he worked on his technique post football injury. Options therefore become:
1. Bairstow keeps and bats seven
2. Foakes keeps, and Bairstow/Buttler fight it out for one spot.
I think, at this stage, that we will favour green seamers for much of the series, playing to our strengths. I don't think we'll go without a spinner, but I wouldn't be amazed if we considered it, and I think the side is likely to start something like Burns, AN Other, AN Other, Root, Buttler, Stokes, Bairstow, Ali or Curran, Woakes or Archer, Broad, Anderson. Who the others may be will be up in the air, but names in the frame early season will be Denly, Malan, Stoneman, Hameed and Vince - sorry, its not innovative, but its true - with the possible bolters any of Warwickshire's top three who make a solid start and possibly Joe Clarke.