Steven Smith was the leading run scorer in the series, Chris Rogers played more deliveries than anyone else, while Smith and Joe Root were the only batsmen to score multiple hundreds in Ashes 2015. Yet, you could argue that the batsman who looked the most assured over the entire series wasn't any of these three, but England's captain, Alastair Cook. Four batsmen scored more runs than Cook in the series, but according to ESPNcricinfo's control factor stats, none of them were as assured at the crease as the England captain.

Control factor seeks to measure the percentage of deliveries a batsman played, where the ball went exactly where the batsman intended it to go: that is, he either middled the ball or left it alone; the not-in-control deliveries are the ones which beat the bat or induced edges. A batsman may score a hundred despite getting beaten numerous times, and, on the other hand, might score a fluent, flawless 30, but the first mistake he commits might lead to his dismissal. The nature of batting is such that the final score of a batsman doesn't always indicate how well he played.

Throughout the 2015 Ashes, several experts, most notably Nasser Hussain, said several times that Cook never looked out of form over the five Tests yet found ways to get himself out; he passed 50 just twice, and both were in Tests England lost. The table below justifies Hussain's analysis: of the 732 balls Cook faced in the series, his control factor was very nearly 88%, which is the highest among all batsmen who faced at least 240 balls in the series. But his average was 36.66, clearly below the target he would have set for himself when the series began. In the earlier series of the summer, against New Zealand, Cook's control factor was only marginally higher - 89.7% - but his average in that series was more than twice as high: 77.25, with three 50-plus scores in four innings, including a highest of 162. Batsmen often tend to say that they felt good and were timing it well in the nets despite not getting huge scores; if Cook says that, he's clearly not bluffing.

In fact, the table below suggests there isn't necessarily a strong correlation between control factor and runs scored in a series. Batsmen who bat longer usually middle more deliveries as their innings goes along and hence tend to have higher control percentages, but batsmen with similar amount of runs in a series may end up with widely varying control percentages.

The stats for Cook and Moeen Ali amply illustrate this. Both had similar series with the bat in terms of runs scored and batting averages, but while Cook was solid and gave very few opportunities to the bowlers, Moeen was a wicket waiting to fall in most of his innings, flailing outside off repeatedly. When he connected, he usually got a boundary, but he was lucky he failed to make contact as often as he did. Cook's control factor, on the other hand, is even more creditable given that he opened the batting and battled against the new ball and the Australian bowlers when they were at their freshest. Their averages in the series differed by 0.04, but Cook and Moeen are at two ends of the table below, which sorts batsmen by their control factors.

Smith had a high control factor as well. Despite looking ungainly at times, he ended up middling plenty of deliveries. Also, in the two Tests when conditions were really tough for the Australian batsmen, he got out early. Adam Voges is up there too, indicating he wasn't as out-of-sorts as his numbers suggest, while David Warner fought it out and got a half-century in each despite never really coming to grips with the conditions.

For England, the big surprise is the relatively high control stats for Jos Buttler - it's marginally higher than Root's control factor.

Control factor for batsmen in Ashes 2015 (Min: 240 balls) Batsman Total balls In control% not in control% Bat ave Alastair Cook 732 87.8 11.7 36.66 Steven Smith 808 85.9 13.9 56.44 Adam Voges 425 83.3 16.2 28.71 Chris Rogers 826 82.4 17.4 60.00 Jos Buttler 247 82.2 17.8 15.25 Joe Root 686 81.5 18.5 57.50 Ben Stokes 309 79.6 20.4 25.12 Peter Nevill 313 79.2 20.8 23.83 Adam Lyth 251 76.9 23.1 12.77 Michael Clarke 241 76.8 23.2 16.50 Ian Bell 382 76.7 22.5 26.87 David Warner 561 75.0 24.4 46.44 Mitchell Starc 270 73.7 26.3 22.42 Moeen Ali 410 73.4 26.6 36.62

It's not surprising that the innings with the highest control factor (with a minimum of 50 balls faced) came from Cook, and the one with the lowest control factor came from Moeen. Cook's best was his 96 from 233 balls at Lord's, which had a control factor of almost 92. In fact, that was the only innings in the entire series with a control percentage of more than 90. The next two innings with highest control percentages are also from the Lord's Test - Smith's double-hundred, and Rogers' second-innings 49; his first-innings century comes a little further down the list. The only innings from Edgbaston and Trent Bridge - the two toughest pitches of the series - are from Root and Cook. Smith, Rogers and Cook all have three innings each in the top 15.

On the other hand, the innings with the lowest control factor was Moeen's second-innings effort of 35 at The Oval, when he played and missed numerous times and frustrated Australia's bowlers no end as they searched for a win before the rains came down. His control factor of 53.4% is easily the poorest among all innings in the series (with a 50-ball cut-off). Warner's three fifties at Trent Bridge, Cardiff and Edgbaston are all in the top ten, while at No. 11 is the innings that changed the course of the first Test - Root's aggressive and game-changing 134. Apart from being dropped on zero Root also played and missed a fair number of times, but rode his luck and batted long enough to alter the course of the match, and perhaps the series.

Inngs with highest control factors in Ashes 2015 (Min: 50 balls) Batsman Runs (Balls) Venue in control not in control Alastair Cook 96 (233) Lord's 91.8 8.2 Steven Smith 215 (346) Lord's 89.6 10.4 Chris Rogers 49 (77) Lord's 89.6 10.4 Joe Root 38 (63) Edgbaston 88.9 11.1 Adam Voges 31 (75) Cardiff 88.0 12.0 Shane Watson 19 (58) Cardiff 87.9 12.1 Shane Watson 30 (57) Cardiff 87.7 12.3 Moeen Ali 39 (57) Lord's 87.7 12.3 Chris Rogers 173 (300) Lord's 87.7 12.3 Joe Root 63 (75) Edgbaston 87.0 13.0 Alastair Cook 85 (234) The Oval 86.4 13.6 Alastair Cook 43 (87) Trent Bridge 86.2 13.8 Steven Smith 33 (56) Cardiff 86.0 14.0 Steven Smith 143 (252) The Oval 85.8 14.2 Chris Rogers 95 (133) Cardiff 85.8 14.2

Inngs with lowest control factors in Ashes 2015 (Min: 50 balls) Batsman Runs (Balls) Venue in control not in control Moeen Ali 35 (57) The Oval 53.4 46.6 David Warner 64 (74) Trent Bridge 64.9 35.1 Stuart Broad 31 (55) Edgbaston 67.3 32.7 Chris Rogers 52 (89) Edgbaston 68.5 31.5 Moeen Ali 59 (78) Edgbaston 68.8 31.3 Peter Nevill 17 (57) Trent Bridge 71.9 28.1 David Warner 52 (86) Cardiff 72.1 27.9 David Warner 77 (62) Edgbaston 72.1 27.9 Adam Lyth 37 (62) Cardiff 72.6 27.4 Mitchell Starc 58 (108) Edgbaston 75.0 25.0 Joe Root 134 (166) Cardiff 75.3 24.7

Cook fell to Nathan Lyon three times in the series and averaged only 19.66 against him, but his control factor against Lyon was more than 92%. He made few mistakes against Lyon, but they turned out to be costly ones. It was similar for Warner against Moeen, though Warner's method was far more aggressive, and his dismissals were often a result of recklessness. In the other instances of high control factors, though, the bowlers had little joy, with zero dismissals in six of those ten combinations.

The table of batsmen who were troubled by specific bowlers is more interesting as there are instances of bowlers troubling batsmen yet having little to show for it in terms of dismissals. Against Mitchell Starc, for example, Moeen got 74 from 81 balls, yet his control factor was a dismal 65%. Of the 74 runs he scored off Starc, 30 came from uncontrolled strokes.

Similarly, Warner's numbers against England's new-ball pair is equally interesting. Looking at the runs-balls-dismissals stats, it appears as if Warner did much better against Broad than against Anderson, but the control numbers say something entirely different: Warner had an equally tough time against both bowlers. His aggressive style of batsmanship probably hurts his control numbers as well as miscued strokes all add to his not-in-control stats. Warner didn't do that much better against Stokes or Wood, but survived it all to score fifties in each Test and finish the series with very impressive numbers.

Sometimes, though, runs and averages don't tell the whole story.

Batsman-bowler combinations with highest control factors in Ashes 2015 (Min: 60 balls) Batsman-Bowler Balls In control% Not in control % Runs Dismissals Average Alastair Cook-Nathan Lyon 186 92.47 6.45 59 3 19.66 Chris Rogers-Moeen Ali 140 90.71 8.57 72 0 _ Steven Smith-James Anderson 112 90.18 9.82 63 0 _ Steven Smith-Ben Stokes 157 89.81 10.19 85 0 _ David Warner-Moeen Ali 77 89.61 10.39 69 4 17.25 Steven Smith-Moeen Ali 162 88.27 11.11 142 2 71.00 Ben Stokes-Nathan Lyon 79 88.61 11.39 62 1 62.00 Joe Root-Nathan Lyon 111 88.29 11.71 83 0 _ Alastair Cook-Josh Hazlewood 159 87.42 11.95 68 0 _ Steven Smith-Mark Wood 149 87.92 12.08 66 0 _

Batsman-bowler combinations with lowest control factors in Ashes 2015 (Min: 50 balls) Batsman-Bowler Balls In control% Not in control % Runs Dismissals Average Moeen Ali-Mitchell Starc 81 65.43 34.57 74 1 74.00 David Warner-Stuart Broad 134 69.4 29.85 66 0 _ David Warner-James Anderson 72 70.83 29.17 32 3 10.66 Ben Stokes-Mitchell Starc 67 71.64 28.36 36 2 18.00 David Warner-Ben Stokes 78 71.79 28.21 62 1 62.00 Peter Nevill-Steven Finn 70 72.86 27.14 19 2 9.50 David Warner-Mark Wood 116 72.41 26.72 110 1 110.00 Adam Voges-Steven Finn 75 73.33 26.67 38 1 38.00 Moeen Ali-Mitchell Johnson 90 73.33 26.67 63 4 15.75 Michael Clarke-Mark Wood 55 74.55 25.45 29 2 14.50

With inputs from Shiva Jayaraman. Control stats recorded by ESPNcricinfo's data team.