Tuesday 31 December 2013

Index 2013

INDEX 2013

PERSONAL
24.04 End of the line: my ongoing battle with anxiety
16.05 On second thoughts...
23.09 Turning 30 in Prague: a perspective

POLITICS
Home
09.01 Halfway to hell?
25.01 Cameron offers a way out of Europe
31.01 Out of bounds
01.03 Eastleigh stays loyal to the Lib Dems as Tories fall third
20.03 Budget 2013: Osborne yet to get Britain going
10.04 Thatcher dies but her politics live on
03.05 Local elections: UKIP arrives on the mainstream scene (results only)
30.08 Cameron urged to step back on Syria
Abroad
22.01 Hope springs eternal for Obama
12.03 Falklanders overwhelmingly opt to stay British

JOURNALISM
20.03 Cameron brokers long-awaited press regulation deal
24.05 If it bleeds, it leads
01.06 Defamation 101: Sally Bercow's Twitter folly
26.07 The boy in the bubble
02.08 The Sun takes the paywall plunge
05.10 Miliband v the Daily Mail
12.10 Nothing to fear?
03.12 Guardian editor stands firm over Snowden

SPORT
FOOTBALL
2012/13
05.01 The Season 2012/13: Van Persie puts Man United "halfway" to title
05.01 FA Cup Third Round: Cup of woe continues for Newcastle
26.01 FA Cup Fourth Round: Man United on the box again
24.02 League Cup Final: Swansea sweep aside Bradford dream
28.02 Oh, when the Heed went marching in!
02.06 The Season 2012/13: Fergie signs off in style 
2013/14
17.08 Premier League preview: All change at the top
23.09 Mackems ditch Di Canio
05.11 Arsenal stride five points clear
22.12 Tyneside full of festive cheer
World Cup 2014
13.09 Hodgson satisfied by Ukraine stalemate
11.10 England stay on course
15.10 Copacabana, here we come!
19.11 Big guns make it to Brazil
06.12 Nightmare draw for England
10.12 BBC will show England opener
Other international
06.02 England beat the Samba Boys to mark FA anniversary
12.02 African Cup of Nations: Nigeria return to Nations Cup summit
27.03 World Cup qualifiers: England stutter while Scotland fall first
14.08 England edge past Scotland in cracking curtain raiser

CRICKET
Pre-Ashes
05.03 England receive Kiwi wake up call
26.03 England make yet another great escape
Ashes 2013 (home)
09.07 Preview: Favourites for the urn
14.07 England emerge victorious from Trent Bridge torture chamber
23.07 Mighty Root helps England rout Aussies
06.08 England retain urn after rainy draw
08.08 Boycott and Aggers, a wonderfully odd couple
12.08 Star man Broad sets up series win
26.08 England lift the urn again at the Oval
26.08 Stats: Bell and the bowlers bail out England
Ashes 2013/14 (away)
17.11 Preview: Battle rejoined
24.11 Australia hammer desperate England
25.11 Trott takes the first step to recovery 
09.12 Total humiliation for England in Adelaide
17.12 Australia recapture the urn in Perth
29.12 Australia beat 'broken' England again
County Championship
27.09 Underdogs Durham defy the doubters 

OTHER
Athletics/Olympics
23.08 Farah completes the 'Double Double' as lightning Bolt strikes again 
08.09 Tokyo to stage IOC's 2020 vision
15.09 GNR 2013: Farah tastes defeat on the South Shields sea front
Cycling
18.01 Retired Cooke lances the boil
21.07 Froome for another
F1 2013
04.07 Pirelli passes the buck after tyre fiasco
29.10 Simply four-some for Vettel
27.11 Team-by-team review: Imperious Vettel makes it nine in a row
Grand National
06.04 Channel 4 takes up the Grand National reins
06.04 Auroras Encore lights up the Grand National
Rugby Union
02.02 Six Nations: All to play for
07.07 Lions maul Aussies in series decider
Snooker
20.04 World Snooker: O'Sullivan celebrates successful re-launch (results only)
Tennis
08.07 Murray makes history at Wimbledon 
16.12 BBC SPOTY 2013: Murray wins by a landslide

MISCELLANEOUS
18.05 Eurovision 2013: Barefoot Emmelie becomes a Great Dane
09.06 Persistence pays off for my Blaydon Races sis
11.11 A field for the Fallen
24.12 Christmas Eve, all dark and stormy...
31.12 Index 2013

Sunday 29 December 2013

The Ashes 2013/14: Australia beat "broken" England again

Australia 204 & 231-2 beat England 255 & 179 by eight wickets Scorecard
Man of the match: Mitchell Johnson (5-63 & 3-25)

AUSTRALIA dismantled the very last vestiges of England's confidence after completing a eight-wicket victory in Melbourne to go 4-0 up in the series.

Shane Watson (83 not out) hit the winning runs as the Aussies set up an odds-on chance of a whitewash which would have been seen as a laughable impossibility just four month ago.

Undoubtedly, though, that says more about England than it ever will about Australia in this ongoing nightmare tour. Now the joke is well and truly on England.

Indeed, the sad decline of Alastair Cook's team has been swift and brutal in this bleak midwinter.

Yes, it cannot be denied that problems had been identified in the summer, namely England's continued inability to pass 400, but the team at least still knew how to win matches back then.

In Melbourne, as Cook candidly admitted afterwards, England proved in no uncertain terms that this is the case no longer - even when put in a favourable position.

Consider the fact that, at the close on day two at the MCG, Australia were 164-9, still 91 runs behind on England's first innings effort.

And that Michael Clarke's decision to field on winning a fourth straight toss appeared to have backfired as the Aussies, and David Warner in particular, batted with a certain hubris which looked set to be their downfall.

But then came day three, surely up there when considering the darkest recent days of English cricket history.

First, Brad Haddin was once again able to reduce the Aussie arrears by compiling a last-wicket stand with Nathan Lyon which was worth 40 runs.

In doing so, Haddin broke the Ashes record for the highest aggregate by a wicket-keeper. His current total of 390 - at 65, no less - beats Alec Stewart's 378 from 1993 with a match to spare.

Those extra runs with Lyon seemed to matter little, though, when captain Cook and fellow opener Michael Carberry neutralised those gains by making it to lunch unbeaten on 54-0 for a lead of 105.

Instead, the real nightmare came in the afternoon session as England collapsed not just once but twice.

With Cook (51) having already departed, lbw to Mitchell Johnson, the first collapse was triggered by Carberry being trapped in front by Peter Siddle with a ball from round the wicket having made 12 painstaking runs in two hours.

Carberry thus proved that England have still not found an opener to replace ex-captain Andrew Strauss who is now happily nestled in the SkySports commentary team.

Nick Compton was dropped for a similar scoring rate - and, while there is much to be said for occupying the crease, by refusing to rotate the strike, Carberry simply puts pressure on himself and the team.

It showed as 86-2 became 86-3 when Joe Root (15) went for a run that was never on, before Ian Bell equally brainlessly lofted Lyon straight to Johnson at mid-off with his first ball.

Kevin Pietersen, who had come under pressure between Tests for his carefree batting approach, then tried to take on the responsibility of repairing the innings.

Briefly, he found a sensible ally in Ben Stokes. Having scored just 19, though, the Durham all-rounder rather tossed his wicket away to become Lyon's second victim on what would be a momentous day for the off-spinner.

Jonny Bairstow - in for discarded vice-captain Matt Prior - also began with good intent, hitting two sixes to extend a record broken earlier by Haddin for the most hit in a single Ashes series.

However, the Yorkshireman also could not build on his start, and he needlessly clipped a wide Johnson delivery behind to Haddin on 21.

England were beginning to struggle on 173-6 but what then followed almost defied belief, even accounting for what has gone on over the past six weeks.

Tim Bresnan added to Bell's duck, swiping at Lyon but succeeding only in dragging the ball onto his own bails.

And then Stuart Broad departed without scoring to Lyon too, allowing the Aussie to celebrate a 100th Test wicket.

173-5 had become 174-8 in the blinking of an eye but England did not stop there.

Seemingly unable to trust James Anderson or Monty Panesar with blocking at the other end, Pietersen (49) felt obliged to charge down the pitch in a bid for some quick runs off Lyon.

Instead, he could only find Ryan Harris stalking the boundary at long-off as Lyon (5-50) celebrated the most unlikely of five-fers on a pitch that had offered barely any turn whatsoever.

Man of the match Johnson inevitably wound up proceedings by trapping Panesar lbw for a fourth duck in the innings as the tourists were bowled out for 179.

In all, England's last five wickets had fallen for six runs - and, combined with the earlier collapse of three wickets for one run, England lost eight for seven. Frankly, it was a complete disgrace.

With eight overs left in the day, Australia made serene progress towards their target of 231, finishing a remarkable third day on 30-0, leaving them with 201 to get.
 
But, such was the strength of England's earlier position, the statistics still gave them some hope.

Until today, the highest fourth innings Test run chase since the introduction of a drop-in pitch to the MCG had been 183.

Nevertheless, within an hour of play on this fourth and final day, England had effectively surrendered the match.

First, Warner got a second life when Bairstow froze to the spot and Cook grassed at first slip - then, shortly afterwards, Chris Rogers was reprieved following a quite unbelievable drop by Cook.

The England captain has much on his mind at present, clearly. It is just a shame that one of them is not catching the ball.

Cook subsequently baffled viewers by setting bizarrely negative fields which did nothing to stop the Aussies from scoring at more than four an over.

And his rotation of the bowlers left much to be desired. Broad - England's best bowler on the tour - took on just 10 overs while Root was twice preferred to Panesar in the absence of the retired Graeme Swann.

This was scrambled thinking at its very worst from Cook who is still an inexperienced captain.

He is also an unduly negative one, however - and, if heads somehow do not roll after this, he and head coach Andy Flower need a complete change of mindset to rebuild England's shattered confidence.

England are a "broken" team at present according to BBC Test Match Special summariser Jonathan Agnew, who noticed there was "no conversation between anyone" on the field.

Sidekick Geoffrey Boycott also went through the varying stages of the Kuebler-Ross model on grief.

He was at depression with his first comment: "The hardest decision Australia have had to make this morning is what to have for lunch" - before finally moving to acceptance.

"This is so disappointing and hurtful as a lover of English cricket.I don't mind losing but this is just a massacre," he added.

By contrast, the Aussies were understandably cock-a-hoop as Rogers recovered from a streaky start to record his second Test century, the eighth by the home side in this series. England have had still just one centurion, that being Stokes in Perth.

Even when Panesar found success to the most muted England celebrations ever, the joy continued for Australia when skipper Clarke, in his 101st match, became only the 27th player to reach 8,000 Test runs.

Oddly, it is a record which he shares exactly with his opposite number Cook - though, at 29 years and three days, the Englishman yesterday became the youngest ever to reach the milestone, younger even than Sachin Tendulkar.

Pietersen also passed the 8,000 runs mark within this match but, for the England pair, these individual achievements will feel utterly worthless, considering the mess which surrounds them.

Onto Sydney, this shambolic tour rolls then - with the singular aim of avoiding the whitewash.

The pack may be given another shuffle - will we see Garry Ballance at the expense of Carberry or one of the three giant seamers in place of Panesar or Bresnan?

Regardless of the selection, though, a second 5-0 whitewash in just seven years is surely on the cards.

After all, just shuffling a pack of 52 jokers will still not make a winning hand.

THE ASHES 2013/14
21-24 NovFIRST: Australia 295 & 401-7d beat England 136 & 179 by 381 runsBrisbane
5-9 DecSECOND: Australia 570-9d & 132-3d bt England 172 & 312 by 218 runs Adelaide
13-17 DecTHIRD: Australia 385 & 369-6d beat England 251 & 353 by 150 runsPerth
26-29 DecFOURTH: Australia 204 & 231-2 beat England 255 & 179 by eight wkts Melbourne
3-7 JanFIFTH TESTSydney

CENTURIES
148 Michael Clarke (Australia)
124 David Warner (Australia)
120 Ben Stokes (England)
118 Brad Haddin (Australia)
116 Chris Rogers (Australia)
113 Michael Clarke (Australia)
112 David Warner (Australia)
111 Steve Smith (Australia)
103 Shane Watson (Australia)

FIVE-WICKET HAULS
7-40 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)
6-81 Stuart Broad (England)
5-42 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)
5-50 Nathan Lyon (Australia)
5-63 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)

Tuesday 24 December 2013

Christmas Eve, all dark and stormy...

ALL of the bad weather affecting the Christmas getaway in the UK has thankfully left Tyneside largely unscathed.

Nevertheless, the rain and wind has reminded me of this festive song, especially liked by my late Nanna:

Christmas Eve All Dark & Stormy
Christmas Eve all dark and stormy
Time to go to bed
Time to hang your little stocking just above your head
Through the door and down the chimney
In the candle light 
Santa Claus the Christmas Fairy
Means to come tonight [repeat]

He is old and very feeble
With a splendid sack
Full of lots of lovely playthings
On his bended back
While the children are a sleeping
He will softly go
Fill their stockings full of playthings  
‘Til they overflow [repeat]

Please I want a railway engine, 
Please I want a whip.
Please I want a little rag dolly, 

Or a sailing ship
Through the door and down the chimney
In the candle light
Santa Claus the Christmas Fairy
Means to come tonight [repeat]

Merry Christmas to all of my family, friends, and occasional blog readers
Enjoy the next few days and stay safe x

Sunday 22 December 2013

The Season 2013/14: Tyneside full of festive cheer

NEWCASTLE UNITED head into Christmas in canny fettle after a sixth win in eight games kept Alan Pardew's men in the race for a top six place. 

The Magpies were strong favourites against Crystal Palace yesterday but did not let that pressure, or a boisterous home crowd at Selhurst Park, get in the way of them recording a fifth away league win of the season. 

Struggling Palace, who had shown some good recent form under new manager Tony Pulis, had their bubble burst when Yohan Cabaye struck his fourth goal of the season. 

And, by half time, it was 2-0 when Mathieu Debuchy, supporting the right wing to good effect from full back, sent in a low cross which was diverted under little pressure by Danny Gabbidon into his own net. 

The Eagles were not about to give up - and both Chieck Tiote and Fabricio Coloccini went into the book early in the second half for stopping a couple of dangerous attacks. 

Nevertheless, Newcastle were still the better side on the ball and pushed on again to kill off any Palace hopes. 

Cabaye, who was excellent throughout, was unlucky not to catch out veteran goalkeeper Julian Speroni with a direct free-kick in the swirling wind before Yoan Gouffran hit the bar with a curler. 

With 10 minutes left, Hatem Ben Arfa came on to replace Cabaye, and an impressive cameo included a low cross with which fellow substitute Shola Ameobi should have done better. 

At least Ameobi then made amends by winning a penalty after being brought down on the turn, a spot-kick converted into the top corner by Ben Arfa. 

3-0, points safe. Merry Christmas from Newcastle United.

But, more than being just the celebration of what is - let's face it - a bog-standard Premier League victory, this write-up points towards the context in which Newcastle's run has occurred.

Manager Pardew began the season under pressure, his side having slipped from fifth to 16th in the space of 12 months. 

United then began the campaign in truly wretched fashion, losing 4-0 at Manchester City, a result which looked much worse then than it does now. 

Form then recovered a little - but, in late October, came a second successive derby loss, more painful still since it came about simply because the worst side in the division showed that bit more fight. 

Suddenly, Pardew was back on the precipice, and a couple of tough-looking fixtures loomed - Chelsea at home and Tottenham Hotspur away. 

Unexpectedly, United collected six points, repeating their home win from February against the Blues before November player of the month Tim Krul somehow ensured Loic Remy's early goal at White Hart Lane would be a winner. 

Newcastle then enjoyed successive 2-1 home wins against Norwich City and West Bromwich Albion, Moussa Sissoko scoring a glorious goal from 25 yards in the latter. 

That run, though, ended with a limp 3-0 defeat at Swansea and next up was Old Trafford where Newcastle had not won against Manchester United in 32 attempts stretching back to 1972. 

David Moyes's men had looked vulnerable throughout the season, however - and so it proved as Newcastle shaded possession and carved out the better chances. 

The decisive moment came just after the hour mark when Sissoko took advantage of a touch of fortune, and pulled the ball back for Cabaye to poke it in the corner. 

Now, normally, Newcastle could have expected Man United to throw the proverbial kitchen sink at them - but, barring a Patrice Evra effort which hit the post and Robin van Persie's correctly disallowed offside goal, Pardew's team held out in relative comfort. 

At last, the Londoner had begun to rewrite history for the right reasons again. 

Indeed, the recent unusual happenings were noted in amusing fashion by Newcastle's long-running fanzine The Mag whose Issue 285 front-cover amusingly read: "Goals from corners... Wins at Old Trafford... Tough job for Santa!"

A reasonable draw against Southampton at home last week and yesterday afternoon's result at Selhurst made it 30 points from 17 games. 

That represents United's best pre-Christmas return since the sharp return from relegation in 2009, better at this stage even than the remarkable fifth place finish in 2011. 

Of course, no prizes are handed out in mid-December, and there are a few things for Magpies fans to look out for in the next few weeks. 

Firstly, fans on Tyneside will know the Toon seem to have a tradition of hitting terrible form over Christmas and the New Year - and, in this regard, the presence of Arsenal and Manchester City in the next three home league games hardly helps. 

Secondly, United must beware of festering false hope on the back of a player who is not (yet) theirs. 

West Brom unintentionally inflated expectations for this season with an eighth-place finish last time out, thanks largely to the form of Romelu Lukaku who was on loan from Chelsea. 

Lukaku now gone, the Baggies have found this season much more of a struggle and sacked manager Steve Clarke last week.

It still remains the case that Remy - who has scored eight league goals already - could also end up just being a temporary focal point of the Newcastle attack. 

Although, at least the other players seem to have recognised this possibility with Gouffran, Cabaye, Sissoko and now Ben Arfa all chipping in recently. 

Undeniably, though, Newcastle's long term chances will effectively be dictated by the club keeping players like Remy. Does Mike Ashley speculate to accumulate just for once?

A final point of note is that, as well as Arsenal and Man City being among the next few visitors at St James Park, the return Tyne-Wear derby on 1 February is now only seven games away. 

Pardew has pretty poor record in this fixture, with just one win out of five. A reversal of his side's current form and an extension of that winless run against the Mackems will reapply some pressure, such is the fickle nature of football. 

For now, though, those worries can be cast aside and Newcastle fans can tuck into their Christmas turkey with a satisfied glow on their faces. 

And that is not just because of the amount of Brown Ale which has been consumed in the hostelries of the Haymarket. Ho'way the Lads.

NEWCASTLE UNITED 2013/14: THE SEASON SO FAR
Manager: Alan Pardew (since December 2010)
League record: P17 W9 D3 L5 F24 A22 LDWWLLWDLWWWWLWDW
FA Cup: Third Round v Cardiff City (H) on 4 January at 3pm
League Cup: lost 0-2 aet v Manchester City (H) in fourth round
Top scorer: Loic Remy (eight)

POINTS ON CHRISTMAS DAY SINCE PROMOTION
2010 22 points from 17 games (finished 12th)
2011 27 points from 17 games (finished fifth)
2012 20 points from 18 games (finished 16th)
2013 30 points from 17 games

Tuesday 17 December 2013

The Ashes 2013/14: Australia recapture the urn in Perth

Australia 385 & 369-6dec beat England 251 & 353 by 150 runs Scorecard
Man of the match: Steve Smith (111)

AUSTRALIA delivered another crushing defeat in the third Test in Perth to take an unassailable 3-0 lead and regain the Ashes urn for the first time since 2009.

Mitchell Johnson inevitably dealt the final blow at 5.45am British time this morning, James Anderson fending the ball to George Bailey at short leg as England's tail struggled again following the removal of Ben Stokes.

Durham all-rounder Stokes hit a wonderful maiden Test century but, remarkably, this was England's first of the series. Australia have scored seven.

Indeed, there is a whole range of statistics which could be reeled off to show a complete disparity in quality between the two sides.

Yes, there have been three lost tosses for Alastair Cook which have resulted in the Australians' getting the advantage of batting first on some belting pitches.

But that excuse can be given little credence really, considering England's biggest failures with the bat have come in their first innings, resulting in three uphill, and ultimately futile, battles.

The bowlers, therefore, have a more legitimate excuse in that, so short have the England innings been, they have been terribly overworked on some baking hot days.

Nevertheless, Anderson and Graeme Swann are two of the most experienced squad members, and yet they currently hold monstrous averages of 58.42 and 80 respectively.

By contrast, four of the five leading wicket takers are Australian, a list headed by Johnson who has taken 23 scalps at 15.47, an average which was at one stage below nine.

Worst of all, the England bowlers have been guilty of allowing Australia to build the scoreboard pressure which the batsman have then wilted under.

They can complain of tiredness quite legitimately but it does work both ways.

For, just as Australia had been 132-6 in Brisbane and 174-4 in Adelaide, they were again struggling at 143-5 on the first day in Perth. Perhaps, we thought, England were going to get a foothold in this series, after all.

Then, Steve Smith arrived at the crease. A hitherto largely unheralded player in this Aussie renaissance, Smith went on to compile only his second Test century.

In Perth, though, this was a much more enjoyable event than his first ton, which actually came in the draw this summer at the Oval amid English celebrations of a 3-0 series victory.

How long ago those days seem now already! Smith was supported by the excellent Brad Haddin who became only the fourth wicketkeeper to score four consecutive Test half centuries - and, together, they ensured Australia recovered to 385 all out.

Despite Cook and fellow opener Michael Carberry compiling their highest stand of the series at 85, the hosts' score was still look good.

This was because England had ended day two on 180-4, still more than 200 behind having lost Cook and Kevin Pietersen before the close.

Cook at least made 72 this time, his highest score of the series. But he then cut spinner Nathan Lyon to David Warner at point in an identical dismissal to the one which had got Warner on day one.

Pietersen, who had been horribly bogged down - scoring just four runs from his first 40 balls - then launched a foolish attack on Peter Siddle, a bowler for whom he seemingly does not rate.

It was a bad mistake and he managed instead only to slog to Johnson at mid-on. Incidentally, Siddle has now accounted for Pietersen on 10 occasions, more than any other bowler.

Maybe it is time for Pietersen to show his opponent a little more respect, though this is a word which has been in short supply in this bitterest of series.

BBC correspondent Jonathan Agnew even dedicated part of his blog to criticising the poor sportsmanship which has been a common theme in the three matches so far.

The latest most blatant example coming from some England players' refusal to applaud Shane Watson's century, as is customary - but the Aussies have hardly been angels.

As mentioned by myself previously, sledging - while an accepted part of the game - is best done with genuine wit and humour rather than simply being abuse.

Back to the action anyway, and resuming on day three, England predictably repeated their previous collapses in Brisbane and Adelaide by losing their last six wickets for 61.

Stuart Broad, who is still considered by many Australians to be public enemy number one following his antics in the summer, was one of only two men to fall to Johnson on this occasion.

But, along with his lbw dismissal from a Johnson yorker, Broad also suffered a bruised toe and, attending interviews on crutches, he became almost symbolic of just how shattered and tortured England looked, both mentally and physically.

Indeed, in many observers' eyes, the third day which followed was the one in which the wheels officially came off for England.

Australia constructed a lead of 369 runs for the loss of just three second innings wickets, eventually declaring 503 ahead, as England produced a performance in the field with which even a park side would be embarrassed.

Matt Prior continued his poor form behind the stumps, as well as with the bat, as he missed a stumping from Graeme Swann's first delivery to Warner before messing up another one an hour later for good measure.

The whole innings was summed up on the fourth day, though, when there was a complete breakdown in communication in the outfield between Bell and Anderson.

As Australia attacked with rich abandon, Bailey skied one and it looked a sure wicket until both fielders hesitated and the ball fell comically between them. The sound of raucous, mocking Aussie laughter filled the Waca.

Even Anderson, a modern day legend with 336 Test wickets to his name, looked finished as Aussie new boy Bailey then took great delight in his fortune by smashing a world record 28 runs off one over.

Somehow, it actually got worse. For skipper Cook, this was meant to be a joyous celebration of 100 caps - but, instead, he was out for his first golden duck in Test cricket to a viscous Ryan Harris inswinger.

Carberry (31), Joe Root (19) and Pietersen (45) then all made starts which they could not convert before Stokes joined Bell at the crease.

The tourists' two most in-form batsmen calmed the storm a little but Bell (60) could not survive the night as he was adjudged via DRS to have edged behind off Siddle.

Resuming with five wickets left, then, Stokes stoked the dream for as long as he could, although Prior (26) had exposed the tail at the other end, edging Johnson behind to Haddin.

That was the only wicket to fall in the morning as England reached lunch on 332-6 but, within three overs of the resumption, Stokes' vigil finally ended as he also edged behind, this time off Lyon.

The fat lady could begin to warm her vocal cords for her official appearance and, indeed, England did not keep her waiting much longer.

Swann was out for four to Lyon before Johnson picked the last two wickets - of Tim Bresnan and Anderson - to make it six for the match without having hit his form of the first two Tests.

Man of the match was instead awarded to Smith for his century as Australia began their biggest Ashes party since 2007.

Of course, the 2006-07 series was Australia's last Ashes series victory - and what a thumping it was!

A 5-0 whitewash as the careers of Justin Langer, Damien Martyn, Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne ended on the highest of highs.

Now, current skipper Michael Clarke has not been shy in voicing his aim to repeat the feat which is rated as low as 13/8 with some bookmakers.

For England, the inquest has already begun with former captain Geoff Boycott demanding coach Andy Flower immediately reviews his position, rather than waiting until the end of the series.

BBC Sport chief sports writer Tom Fordyce has penned a front-page article on 'Ten reasons why it went wrong for England' while the Guardian has a similar review from Vic Marks.

At the Telegraph, another former England bowler-turned-journalist Derek Pringle has also suggested Flower must consider his position, while the newspaper scores the series on a session-by-session basis as 31-8 to Australia.

My thoughts are still slightly fogged by the late nights and early mornings but cautious instinct suggests Flower should not be forced into anything too drastic in terms of his own position given his previous success.

At the same time, the coach and his skipper Cook need to be ruthless and mix it up for the last two Tests, regardless of whether it works or not.

Drop the under-performing Pietersen and Prior for Gary Ballance and Jonny Bairstow. Replace Swann and even Anderson (or Broad, if injured), and put some faith in the giant attack of Steven Finn and Boyd Rankin.

After all, this trio of tall pacemen when including Chris Tremlett, was something which was much hyped before the series began.

Since Tremlett struggled at Brisbane in the first Test, though, the whole idea and therefore much of England's preparation seems to have been ditched.

These are just some ideas off the top of my head and, shorn of some of England's stars of the modern day, it would likely be perceived as a weaker team which would lose 5-0.

But, when the current XI look like being whitewashed anyway, something simply must be done.

Yes, the series may be over and the Ashes sadly back Down Under - but the selection for the fourth Test in Melbourne will still be a source of some fascination as an England fan.

It begins, as is traditional, in the early hours of Boxing Day.

THE ASHES 2013/14
21-25 NovFIRST: Australia 295 & 401-7d beat England 136 & 179 by 381 runsBrisbane
5-9 DecSECOND: Australia 570-9d & 132-3d bt England 172 & 312 by 218 runs Adelaide
13-17 DecTHIRD: Australia 385 & 369-6d beat England 251 & 353 by 150 runsPerth
26-30 DecFOURTH TESTMelbourne
3-7 JanFIFTH TESTSydney

CENTURIES
148 Michael Clarke (Australia)
124 David Warner (Australia)
120 Ben Stokes (England)
118 Brad Haddin (Australia)
113 Michael Clarke (Australia)
112 David Warner (Australia)
111 Steve Smith (Australia)
103 Shane Watson (Australia)

FIVE-WICKET HAULS
7-40 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)
6-81 Stuart Broad (England)
5-42 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)

Monday 16 December 2013

BBC SPOTY 2013: Murray wins by a landslide

2013 BBC SPOTY WINNERS
SPOTYAndy MurrayTennis
Team of the YearBritish & Irish LionsRugby Union
Coach of the YearWarren GatlandRugby Union
Overseas SPOTYSebastian VettelFormula One
Young SPOTYAmber HillShooting
Diamond SPOTYSir Alex FergusonFootball
Unsung HeroJoe & Maggie ForberBasketball
Helen Rollason AwardAnne WilliamsFootball

WIMBLEDON champion Andy Murray won the clearest ever victory in the prestigious BBC Sports Personality of the Year contest last night.

Murray, who became the first British male to win in the Singles on the grass at SW19 in 77 years, took more than half of all the votes cast.

And so the Scot finished well clear of the runner-up, the British & Irish Lions full back Leigh Halfpenny, and record-breaking jockey Tony McCoy, who was in third.

"I'd like to thank all the public who voted, for giving me so much support over the last couple of years," said Murray. "It's made a huge difference."

Now, as even Murray suggested there himself, this award represented the end of an ultimately triumphant long road to acceptance from the wider British public.

But it was not always thus. Guarded in his television appearances off the court, Murray was a difficult character to warm towards, particularly in the midst of an on-court tantrum.

Perhaps this is also the reason why an off-hand joke to Tim Henman as a 17-year-old about supporting anyone but England at the World Cup hung around him like an albatross for so long.

Last but not least, it did not help that he was perceived as a bit of a loser, a better player than Henman no doubt - but unfortunately born into a harsher era against the likes of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.

Murray did indeed lose his first four Grand Slam finals. However, he then cleverly recruited the only man who previously had that record as a coach.

It was surely the wisest move of his career. Lendl knew where Murray was at mentally and has helped him overcome those barriers by making him so physically fit, the gruelling five-setters are no longer a problem.

First, though, there was still more heartbreak when Murray lost to Federer in the 2012 Wimbledon final despite taking the first set and then broke down in floods of tears on Centre Court.

Pain was all around that day but, in the long run, it helped.

It made Murray ever more determined and, by the end of an extraordinary British sporting summer, he had taken Olympic gold against Federer at Wimbledon and won his first Grand Slam at the US Open in New York against Djokovic.

However, his victory at Flushing Meadows was in the middle of the night here in Britain, and it hardly made a dent in lifting the Wimbledon curse.

This year, then, Murray still had work to do and pressure to deal with - but deal with it he did, landing himself in another Wimbledon final, this time against Djokovic.

Again, Murray took the first set but then he also came out on top against the then-world number one in a topsy-turvy second.

The scene was set and it was perfect. A hot sunny July day ended with Murray winning in straight sets to send the public into disbelieving raptures.

From then on, the man from Dunblane was an odds-on favourite for this prize and eventually he dropped as low as 1/50 in the betting once the telephone lines opened.

The BBC consequently had a difficult job to hype up an entirely predictable outcome. Murray also expressed disappointment that he could not personally attend the First Direct Arena in Leeds.

Professional as ever, though, he felt obliged to put his return to fitness ahead of the Australian Open in January above SPOTY.

At least, the live link to Miami worked this time - well, it did once Murray, running late from a training session, had stepped out of the shower.

---

In terms of the other awards, the British & Irish Lions were well-rewarded for their efforts Down Under, helped no doubt by their main rivals - England's Ashes cricketers - flopping there at the moment.

The Lions won Team of the Year for their 2-1 series victory while their Kiwi mentor Warren Gatland took Coach of the Year.

As mentioned, Lendl must have surely been strongly in the running for that prize considering all of his work with Murray.

But Gatland, too, deserved huge credit following some pretty heavy criticism after his decision to drop Brian O'Driscoll for a final Test which ended up being a Lions mauling.

Sebastian Vettel became the first Formula One driver to win the Overseas SPOTY Award since Niki Lauda in 1977 after his complete domination of the sport over the past four seasons broke new ground in 2013.

The Young SPOTY prize went to 16-year-old skeet shooter Amber Hill who beat athlete Dina Asher-Smith and golfer Charley Hull on an all-female shortlist.

And the Unsung Hero award went to spouses Joe and Maggie Forber for their hard work at the Amaechi Basketball Centre in Whalley Range, Manchester.

The £2m facility is named after the club's most famous graduate, John Amaechi, who has gone on to play in the NBA for Cleveland Cavaliers, Orlando Magic, and Utah Jazz.

Finally, two football figures were honoured for entirely different reasons. Former Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson picked up the one-off Diamond Award having retired from an illustrious management career following a record 13th English league title in May.

Still, this was a slightly strange choice from the BBC for a prize celebrating 60 years of the programme, considering Ferguson refused to speak to the broadcaster for many years.

Now, it could just be considered an olive branch - but the more cynical viewer would consider it was possibly the only way of ensuring he would appear on the show.

There was nothing cynical about the other football prize, the Helen Rollason Award, awarded posthumously to Hillsborough campaigner Anne Williams to an emotional standing ovation.

Anne, who lost her son Kevin in the crush died, in April from cancer this year. She had spent more than a third of her 62 years fighting for justice.

In September 2012, there was a belated victory of sorts in that the ridiculous original inquest verdicts were overturned.

The new inquest verdicts are expected in the early part of next year, 25 years on from the tragedy.

Anne, of course, will not be around to see the outcome of those cases. Nevertheless, this was a fitting acknowledgement of all of her hard work that may at last ensure there is some justice for the 96.

60 YEARS OF SPOTY
By year:
1954Christopher ChatawayAthletics1984Torvill & DeanFigure skating
1955Gordon PirieAthletics1985Barry McGuiganBoxing
1956Jim LakerCricket1986Nigel MansellFormula One
1957Dai ReesGolf1987Fatima WhitbreadAthletics
1958Ian BlackSwimming1988Steve DavisSnooker
1959John SurteesMotorcycle1989Nick FaldoGolf
1960David BroomeShow jumping1990Paul GascoigneFootball
1961Stirling MossFormula One1991Liz McColganAthletics
1962Anita LonsbroughSwimming1992Nigel MansellFormula One
1963Dorothy HymanAthletics1993Linford ChristieAthletics
1964Mary RandAthletics1994Damon HillFormula One
1965Tom SimpsonCycling1995Jonathan EdwardsAthletics
1966Bobby MooreFootball1996Damon HillFormula One
1967Henry CooperBoxing1997Greg RusedskiTennis
1968David HemeryAthletics1998Michael OwenFootball
1969Ann JonesTennis1999Lennox LewisBoxing
1970Henry CooperBoxing2000Steve RedgraveRowing
1971Princess AnneEventing2001David BeckhamFootball
1972Mary PetersAthletics2002Paula RadcliffeAthletics
1973Jackie StewartFormula One2003Jonny WilkinsonRugby Union
1974Brendan FosterAthletics2004Kelly HolmesAthletics
1975David SteeleCricket2005Andrew FlintoffCricket
1976John CurryFigure skating2006Zara PhillipsEventing
1977Virginia WadeTennis2007Joe CalzagheBoxing
1978Steve OvettAthletics2008Chris HoyCycling
1979Sebastian CoeAthletics2009Ryan GiggsFootball
1980Robin CousinsFigure skating2010Tony McCoyHorse racing
1981Ian BothamCricket2011Mark CavendishCycling
1982Daley ThompsonAthletics2012Bradley WigginsCycling
1983Steve CramAthletics2013Andy MurrayTennis

By sport:
17 Athletics
6 Formula One
5 Football, Boxing
4 Cricket, Tennis Cycling
3 Figure skating
2 Golf, Swimming, Eventing
1 Snooker, Rugby Union, Rowing, Show jumping, Horse racing, Motorcycle racing

Tuesday 10 December 2013

World Cup 2014: BBC will show England opener


THE BBC will show England's opening World Cup match against Italy on 14 June with ITV taking on the other two group games against Uruguay and Costa Rica.

The public service broadcaster compensates for only having one of the three guaranteed England matches by getting first choice in the last 16 and the semi finals - and that means ITV has first pick at the quarter final stage.

Both channels will show the Final on 13 July in a head-to-head affair which the BBC can expect to win comfortably. It had five times as many viewers as ITV for the 2010 Final when Spain beat Netherlands 1-0.

Now, following the remarkable draw last week, that fixture will be repeated in the group stages of World Cup 2014 - and it is the BBC which has scored a coup by getting the rights to show it in its first broadcast of the tournament.

Indeed, the Beeb has done rather well out of the split in that it will show Spain, France, Italy, Germany, and Portugal twice as often as ITV in the group stages.

Nevertheless, ITV cannot complain too much. It will screen the Germany-Portugal tie and also show more group matches featuring Brazil and Argentina, including the tournament opener between the hosts and Croatia.

Of course, as a commercial broadcaster with advertising rights to sell, bumper primetime audiences are much more important for ITV.

England-Uruguay at 8pm on 19 June fits the bill perfectly, while England-Costa Rica will be aired to a tea-time audience at 5pm on 24 June.

The BBC was almost landed with a very late night when England-Italy was set to begin at 2am BST.

However, FIFA subsequently changed the kick-off time in the Amazonian city of Manaus to 6pm local time, 11pm BST.

Instead, ITV has the tough sell of a graveyard slot with the Ivory Coast-Japan tie kicking off at 2am.

Below are the full details of the television split, first on a group-by-group basis, then followed by a day-by-day guide

GROUP A
TVTime/Date
Venue
ITV9pm Thu 12 JuneBRAZIL v CROATIASao Paulo
ITV5pm Fri 13 JuneMEXICO v CAMEROONNatal
BBC8pm Tue 17 JuneBRAZIL v MEXICOFortaleza
ITV11pm Wed 18 JuneCAMEROON v CROATIAManaus
ITV9pm Mon 23 JuneCAMEROON v BRAZILBrasilia
ITV9pm Mon 23 JuneCROATIA v MEXICORecife

GROUP B
TVTime/Date
Venue
BBC8pm Fri 13 JuneSPAIN v NETHERLANDSSalvador
ITV11pm Fri 13 JuneCHILE v AUSTRALIACuiaba
BBC8pm Wed 18 JuneSPAIN v CHILERio de Janeiro
ITV5pm Wed 18 JuneNETHERLANDS v AUSTRALIAPorto Alegre
ITV5pm Mon 23 JuneAUSTRALIA v SPAINCuritiba
ITV5pm Mon 23 JuneNETHERLANDS v CHILESao Paulo

GROUP C
TVTime/Date
Venue
BBC5pm Sat 14 JuneCOLOMBIA v GREECEBelo Horizonte
ITV2am Sun 15 JuneIVORY COAST v JAPANRecife
BBC5pm Thu 19 JuneCOLOMBIA v IVORY COASTBrasilia
BBC11pm Thu 19 JuneJAPAN v GREECENatal
BBC9pm Tue 24 JuneJAPAN v COLOMBIACuiaba
BBC9pm Tue 24 JuneGREECE v IVORY COASTFortaleza

GROUP D
TVTime/Date
Venue
ITV8pm Sat 14 JuneURUGUAY v COSTA RICAFortaleza
BBC11pm Sat 14 JuneENGLAND v ITALYManaus
ITV8pm Thu 19 JuneURUGUAY v ENGLANDSao Paulo
BBC5pm Fri 20 JuneITALY v COSTA RICARecife
ITV5pm Tue 24 JuneITALY v URUGUAYNatal
ITV5pm Tue 24 JuneCOSTA RICA v ENGLANDBelo Horizonte

GROUP E
TVTime/Date
Venue
ITV5pm Sun 15 JuneSWITZERLAND v ECUADORBrasilia
BBC8pm Sun 15 JuneFRANCE v HONDURASPorto Alegre
ITV8pm Fri 20 JuneSWITZERLAND v FRANCESalvador
ITV11pm Fri 20 JuneHONDURAS v ECUADORCuritiba
BBC9pm Wed 25 JuneHONDURAS v SWITZERLANDManaus
BBC9pm Wed 25 JuneECUADOR v FRANCERio de Janeiro

GROUP F
TVTime/Date
Venue
BBC11pm Sun 15 JuneARGENTINA v BOSNIA-HERZRio de Janeiro
BBC8pm Mon 16 JuneIRAN v NIGERIACuritiba
ITV5pm Sat 21 JuneARGENTINA v IRANBelo Horizonte
BBC11pm Sat 21 JuneNIGERIA v BOSNIA-HERZCuiaba
ITV5pm Wed 25 JuneNIGERIA v ARGENTINAPorto Alegre
ITV5pm Wed 25 JuneBOSNIA-HERZ v IRANSalvador

GROUP G
TVTime/Date
Venue
ITV5pm Mon 16 JuneGERMANY v PORTUGALSalvador
BBC11pm Mon 16 JuneGHANA v UNITED STATESNatal
BBC8pm Sat 21 JuneGERMANY v GHANAFortaleza
BBC11pm Sun 22 JuneUNITED STATES v PORTUGALManaus
BBC5pm Thu 26 JuneUNITED STATES v GERMANYRecife
BBC5pm Thu 26 JunePORTUGAL v GHANABrasilia

GROUP H
TVTime/Date
Venue
ITV5pm Tue 17 JuneBELGIUM v ALGERIABelo Horizonte
BBC11pm Tue 17 JuneRUSSIA v SOUTH KOREACuiaba
BBC5pm Sun 22 JuneBELGIUM v RUSSIARio de Janeiro
ITV8pm Sun 22 JuneSOUTH KOREA v ALGERIAPorto Alegre
ITV9pm Thu 26 JuneSOUTH KOREA v BELGIUMSao Paulo
ITV9pm Thu 26 JuneALGERIA v RUSSIACuritiba

DAY-BY-DAY GUIDE Key BBC ITV
Thu 12 June
(9pm) Brazil v Croatia
Fri 13 June  
(5pm) Mexico v Cameroon 
(8pm) Spain v Netherlands 
(11pm) Chile v Australia
Sat 14 June 
(5pm) Colombia v Greece 
(8pm) Uruguay v Costa Rica 
(11pm) England v Italy
Sun 15 June  
(2am) Ivory Coast v Japan 
(5pm) Switzerland v Ecuador 
(8pm) France v Honduras 
(11pm) Argentina v Bosnia-Herzegovina
Mon 16 June  
(5pm) Germany v Portugal
(8pm) Iran v Nigeria 
(11pm) Ghana v United States
Tue 17 June  
(5pm) Belgium v Algeria 
(8pm) Brazil v Mexico 
(11pm) Russia v South Korea
Wed 18 June 
(5pm) Netherlands v Australia 
(8pm) Spain v Chile
(11pm) Cameroon v Croatia

Thu 19 June 
(5pm) Colombia v Ivory Coast
(8pm) Uruguay v England 
(11pm) Japan v Greece
Fri 20 June 
(5pm) Italy v Costa Rica 
(8pm) Switzerland v France 
(11pm) Honduras v Ecuador
Sat 21 June 
(5pm) Argentina v Iran 
(8pm) Germany v Ghana 
(11pm) Nigeria v Bosnia-Herzegovina
Sun 22 June 
(5pm) Belgium v Russia
(8pm)
South Korea v Algeria 

(11pm) United States v Portugal 
Mon 23 June 
(5pm) Australia v Spain, Netherlands v Chile
(9pm) Cameroon v Brazil, Croatia v Mexico
Tue 24 June 
(5pm) Italy v Uruguay, Costa Rica v England
(9pm) Japan v Colombia, Greece v Ivory Coast
Wed 25 June 
(5pm) Nigeria v Argentina, Bosnia-Herzegovina v Iran 
(9pm) Honduras v Switzerland, Ecuador v France
Thu 26 June 
(5pm) United States v Germany, Portugal v Ghana 
(9pm) South Korea v Belgium, Algeria v Russia

Monday 9 December 2013

Ashes 2013/14: Total humiliation for England in Adelaide

Australia 570-9dec & 132-3dec beat England 172 & 312 by 218 runs Scorecard
Man of the match: Mitchell Johnson (8-113)

AUSTRALIA took a huge stride towards regaining the Ashes after a comprehensive 218-run victory over sorry England put them 2-0 up in the series.

Skipper Michael Clarke (148) and Mitchell Johnson (7-40) were the hosts' heroes again - but, in truth, this was an outstanding all-round team performance in which they outclassed England in every facet of the game.

By contrast, for the most part, the tourists' batting would normally be described as abject, except that it was often much worse even than that.

Instead, former England captain Michael Vaughan summed up their efforts at the crease quite neatly in describing them as "feeble".

Yes, exactly what I had feared in my match report for the first Test in Brisbane had, indeed, come to pass.

Back then, I considered if the die for this series may have already been cast with the "theme being the England top order's complete inability to cope with short, fast-paced deliveries from Johnson".

Sadly, the England batsmen did little better in Adelaide than they had at the Gabba - despite a much more docile pitch which was in evidence for much of the first two days after Australia won the toss and chose to bat. 

The flat pitch gave the hosts the perfect opportunity to preserve at least the 1-0 lead which had been gained at the Gabba by batting England out of the match early on.

And, in reaching 155-1 at one point, it looked exactly as if this was about to happen. In fairness to the tourists, they then worked hard to restrict the Aussies to 273-5 at stumps on day one.

It should have been better than that, though, as England put down at least three catches with Michael Carberry and Monty Panesar at fault for two howlers.

Even on a relatively good day, then, the dropped catches belied a lack of confidence which has seeped into the England camp.

On day two, Australia were not about to offer any more chances and, instead, the theme of the day was Clarke's continuing love affair with the Adelaide Oval.

The Aussie captain has now scored six Test centuries in nine appearances there and averages just below 100.

Clarke also clearly relishes playing against England. Seven of his 26 Test centuries have come in Ashes contests, including three in the last five Tests.

Indeed, such is Clarke's dominance against England that he has now scored 2,030 runs at an average of 48.33.

In leading from the front, Clarke was joined by his vice-captain Brad Haddin who also seems to revel in Ashes combat, reaching three figures this time following two half centuries in Brisbane.

There was a touch of fortune for Haddin, though. Durham youngster Ben Stokes appeared to have made the wicketkeeper his maiden Test scalp when he was caught behind on 51.

But, on a chastening day in the field, replays showed Stokes had committed the cardinal sin of overstepping. It was a no-ball, and Haddin was recalled to the crease to continue making hay.

This was far from just the Clarke and Haddin show, however. Australia batted right down the order as, in all, four other men made half centuries, including Ryan Harris at number 10 who was 55 not out.

Even last man Nathan Lyon had the audacity to hit a six in an Ashes record of 12 in the innings as the Aussies racked up the runs at a good pace.

Clarke then declared for the first time in the match with the score on 570-9, a minor psychological triumph in that it prevented England from bowling Australia out.

It also allowed the Adelaide crowd a chance to see if Johnson could repeat his heroics at the Gabba.

Indeed, he could as England skipper Alastair Cook failed to make it to the close of play unscathed, his furniture having been well and truly rearranged.

Fellow opener Carberry and Joe Root did make it to stumps but it was a nervy effort with just 35 runs coming off 21 overs, and Root almost running out Carberry to the penultimate ball of the day.

Then, from the final ball of the day, Carberry would have been out lbw if the Australians had requested a review on the Decision Referral System.

Thankfully, though, the Aussies were content to walk off the pitch, happy with their day's work - and, generally, the DRS is having a much quieter series Down Under than it did in England when each day seemed to be mired in some sort of controversy.

It mattered little that Australia had not managed to take a second wicket on day two. Johnson returned on day three, rested and fired up as England failed to meet fire with fire.

First, though, he got a little help from his friends. Root had seen off the opening spell of hostile fast bowling but then got out to a brainless sweep to deep square leg off spinner Lyon for 15.

Then, just before lunch, Carberry - who had worked hard for his maiden half-century - fell to a brilliant catch by David Warner off Shane Watson.

However, the worst wicket of the morning session came in between those two dismissals as Kevin Pietersen clipped the ball straight to George Bailey in the leg-side for four.

It was a shocking shot which seemed to have a complete disregard for both the context of the match and the inexperience and the poor form in the batting line-up around him.

After lunch, England could keep Johnson from centre-stage no longer. The Queenslander was magnificent again, bowling a spell of 5-16 on his way to 7-40.

Twice, Johnson was on hat-tricks after Stuart Broad and James Anderson were bowled first ball following the dismissals of Matt Prior, who continued his woeful form, and Graeme Swann.

The second hat-trick ball was kept out by Panesar who went on to survive almost an hour for his two runs.

Faced with a barrage of bouncers, it was a much braver effort than many of his colleagues had managed, and allowed Ian Bell to make the best of a bad job with a stylish 72.

So, Panesar and Bell can emerge with some credit - but, after Anderson made a couple of early breakthroughs in dismissing Chris Rogers and Watson, Warner repaired the little damage with an aggressive 83.

Remarkably, Australia closed day three leading by 530 runs having led by 535 at the start of play. But what had prevailed in between meant England could hardly consider this progress...

Onto day four, and a positive Clarke declaration with the Aussie captain mindful of an unsettled forecast for the final two days in Adelaide.

Yet another England collapse looked likely when captain Cook played the latest braindead shot, hooking Johnson to Ryan Harris at fine leg for a solitary run.

Carberry followed soon after, caught by Lyon off Peter Siddle for 14 to leave England on 20-2, just the 510 runs behind.

Ultimately, England would actually bat through a whole day for the first time in the series, as Root (87) and Pietersen (53) belatedly found some semblance of form. 

Neither could make the truly huge score which the situation required, though. 

Indeed, with Stokes (28) edging to Clarke in the slips off Harris in the last half hour, Australia entered the final day needing just four more wickets. 

Within an hour, they had got them. Broad fell in the opening over of the day, scoring a six into the leg-side before a similar heave from the next ball found Lyon at deep square leg. 

Swann, averaging 3.25 with the bat and a hell of a lot more with the ball, then failed for the fourth time in the series to get out of single figures before nicking an unthreatening Harris delivery to Clarke in the slips. 

And Prior was the penultimate man out, albeit having made a creditable 69 to end his own run of low scores. 

Again, though, his wicket came from mistimed hook. In fact, 21 of England's 40 wickets in this series - i.e. more than half - have been to catches in the leg-side with eight of those caught on the boundary. 

It demonstrates perfectly England's scrambled thinking that they keep going for the hook and the pull to the short ball, and expecting to get away with it. 

If nothing else, it brings to mind the famous Albert Einstein quote: "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."

However, England look to be too far gone to save in this series, despite captain Cook's call for a period of introspection

Certainly, England legend and now Test Match Special summariser Geoffrey Boycott does not give the tourists a hope

"We have won three series comfortably, but we are going to get annihilated in this one," he said.

Perth on the west coast comes next, this coming Friday. It is a venue where England have won just once ever, back in the 1978-79 series against a weakened Australia side. 

The pitch is expected to be hard and bouncy, similar to the Gabba, and Johnson - who has 17 wickets in this series already at a remarkable average of just 12 - will expect to have another field day. 

England, then, may have officially lost the Ashes by the end of this week, depending on how they do at the Waca. Even a retention now looks nigh on impossible. 

Indeed, although just a draw would do, only four teams in Test history have come back from 2-0 down in a series to get a result - and only one of them, featuring a certain Sir Donald Bradman, actually won. 

Cook's men may want to set the sights a little bit lower first, England having now lost successive Tests by more than 200 runs for only the second time in their history.

Somehow avoiding defeat in Perth would be a start for the fact that it would keep the Ashes alive beyond Christmas and, perhaps more importantly at this stage, end home hopes of a whitewash.

Otherwise, if England go down to defeat again, a 5-0 defeat akin to the nightmare 2006-07 tour will loom larger than ever.

THE ASHES 2013/14
21-25 NovFIRST: Australia 295 & 401-7d bt England 136 & 179 by 381 runsBrisbane
5-9 DecSECOND: Australia 570-9d & 132-3d bt England 172 & 312 by 218 runs Adelaide
13-17 DecTHIRD TESTPerth
26-30 DecFOURTH TESTMelbourne
3-7 JanFIFTH TESTSydney

CENTURIES
148 Michael Clarke (Australia)
124 David Warner (Australia)
118 Brad Haddin (Australia)
113 Michael Clarke (Australia)

FIVE-WICKET HAULS
7-40 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)
6-81 Stuart Broad (England)
5-42 Mitchell Johnson (Australia)