England's players have been called out for a lack of resilience following their collapse to end the fifth and final Ashes Test.
After getting to 0/68 in their pursuit of 271, the visitors were bowled out for 124 in Hobart to finish off a miserable tour in the worst possible way.
That sees England go home on the back of a four-nil series defeat, having failed to pass 300 in any innings across the five Tests.
Former England captain Sir Alastair Cook took aim at the team's lack of fight with the bat.
"There was no resilience there. They showed a lot in Sydney and they probably used it all there," Cook said on BT Sport.
"That was very very tough viewing and that has to be our rock bottom. There can not be a worse place in terms of getting bowled out in an hour and a half.
"I actually can't believe an hour and a half to lose 10 wickets and that's the bit which, as a batter and a professional who plays games of cricket, you get bowled out in a session once or twice a career.
"You could see a batting lineup devoid of all confidence and belief that once you lose one or two wickets, no one seems at the moment to be able to step up and stop that slide.
"You can talk all you want about it in the dressing room, but until some people actually grab this team by the scruff of the neck and move it forward themselves, I can't see what's changing."
The England team can expect a savage post-mortem following the series.
Questions will be asked about the position of coach Chris Silverwood, while Joe Root's stock as has taken a beating.
Calls for an overhaul to the first-class system to place a greater emphasis on red ball cricket have continued to grow throughout the series.
Sir Ian Botham didn't mince his words following the Hobart disaster.
"It's been embarrassing, gutless. I thought the way that they performed today will have disappointed everyone back home and they should be disappointed in that dressing room as well," Botham said on Seven.
"We have to take our heads out of the sand and we need to pull together and prioritise red ball cricket because if we're not careful, the eskimos will be beating us."
Former England batter Mark Butcher was similarly strong in his criticism.
"They do not seem to be able to bat for any sort of length of time and withstand any amount of pressure," Butcher said.
"That was ghastly, tt really was. It was pretty pathetic."