Showing posts with label second test. Show all posts
Showing posts with label second test. Show all posts

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)

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Ashes 2013: Mighty Root helps England rout Aussies


Second Test: England 361 & 349-7dec beat Australia 128 & 235 by 347 runs Scorecard
Man of the match: Joe Root (180)

JOE ROOT hit a magnificent century as England doubled their Ashes advantage with a thumping 347-run win over abject Australia.

The Yorkshireman scored 180 for his second Test ton, his first at Lord's and his first against Australia. At 22 years and 202 days old, he is the youngest man to make an Ashes century for England at the Home of Cricket.

Immediately on his dismissal, caught by Steve Smith off a lofted high shot behind his head, England captain Alastair Cook declared, well aware that his side had more than enough on the board.

The score was 349-7, a lead of 582, after Australia followed up England's sub-par first innings effort of 361 with an even worse display to be bowled out for 128 in less than 54 overs.

Written off before the campaign as possibly the worst Australian touring side in history, it is likely that it will be little remembered by the end of the series just how close the tourists came to taking a 1-0 lead at Trent Bridge.

But, even if the Aussies had managed to pull off a spectacular win in Nottingham, it could only have to be attributed to two extraordinary last-wicket partnerships, rather than an all-round solid performance.

And so, when the tail refused to wag this time in the first innings at Lord's, Australia were done for - having actually made another reasonable start to this Test match.

Cook won the toss for a second time and elected to bat but some of England's batsmen are also enduring a difficult series - and when the skipper was dismissed for 12, lbw to Shane Watson, Root (6) and Kevin Pietersen (2) quickly followed as Ryan Harris justified his selection.

England were in trouble on 28-3 - but Ian Bell again led a recovery, equalling his score of 109 in the first Test, while being ably supported by Jonathan Trott (58) and another Yorkshireman, Jonny Bairstow (67).

That was not the end of the story on the first day, though, as part-time leg-spinner Steve Smith struck three times to remove Bell, Bairstow and Matt Prior and leave the hosts on a hardly-commanding score of 289-7.

Vital early runs on the second day boosted the England total to 361, aided mainly by another swashbuckling last-wicket stand of 48 between Stuart Broad (33) and Graeme Swann (28 not out).

But few considered that a good enough score as Australia appeared to be easing their way towards lunch without the loss of a wicket. 

There was no accounting for what happened next, though.

In the last over before the interval, vice-captain Watson was trapped lbw by Tim Bresnan before wasting a review which only went on to show he was plumb in front of the stumps.

Suddenly, England could go into the 40-minute break with a different mindset, and it showed when the two teams returned to the field for the afternoon session.

Swann struck to remove Chris Rogers lbw for a wicket which, if it had been reviewed, would have been overturned. Watson's hasty use of DRS had cost Australia doubly.

Three overs later, Bresnan - a replacement for the wayward Steven Finn and, thus, a third contributor from Yorkshire - took his second and Australia lost their second review when Phil Hughes was adjudged to have feathered behind to Prior.

That made it 53-3, and it would only get worse for the tourists.

Swann, in an unrelenting mood, would end up taking 5-44 - although even he admitted he got lucky by getting a wicket from a rank waist-high full toss to Rogers which would have gone on to miss the stumps.

Yes, this was another match with its fair share of controversial decisions and the Australians' baffling (mis)use of DRS undoubtedly contributed to their downfall.
 
But even the controversial manner in which the review system is being used by the umpires could not excuse such a lame batting performance.

On the stroke of tea, poor Ashton Agar was run out for 96 runs fewer than he managed in his first innings effort a week earlier on debut.

Then, after the interval, Peter Siddle and Brad Haddin both fell with the score on 104 while James Pattinson and Harris added 24 for the last wicket before the latter was out to Swann.

Australia were all out for 128 and England, with an innings lead of 233 had a decision to make - to enforce the follow-on or not.

Of course, with so much time left in the game, Cook was never likely to ask Australia to return to the crease but the captain's choice to bat again was tarnished as England closed day two on 31-3.

Again Cook (8) and Pietersen (5) failed to contribute, and they were joined by Trott who was out, unusually, for a duck.

All the wickets fell to Siddle who bowled an excellent spell of 3-4, as Australia looked to reduce the impact of their own failings and give themselves a sniff of a chance.

That sniff was snuffed out by lunch on day three, though, as Root and Bresnan survived the opening session unscathed.

Bresnan was an early victim after the break but that only served to bring the in-form Bell out of the hutch to support Root's bid for three figures.

The landmarks were passed after tea as Bell (74) joined centurion Root in a stand of 153 for the fifth wicket - and, though Bell fell to Smith before close, the game was well and truly up for the Aussies.

Still with two days left, England resumed their innings on the fourth morning, presumably in the hope that Root would make a double-century.

It all became rather pointless when Bairstow (20) and, eventually, Root - looking for quick runs - were out, having added only 16 to the overnight score.

And so began the hard work.

Surely Australia could not be as incompetent with the bat again. Surely they would put up a fight in the unlikely hope that they could rescue a draw.

Not exactly. The tourists' top-order faltered again with Watson (20) lbw to Anderson this time, Rogers (6) injudiciously leaving one from Swann which clipped the top of off-stump, and Hughes matching his first innings score of one before he also fell victim to spin.

Hard work? Pah! Australia had simply got themselves in another mess on 36-3.

Thank goodness, then, for the partnership of 98 between Usman Khawaja (54) and skipper Clarke (51) which gave the occasion even the very briefest suggestion of a contest.

The pair had even seen off Swann - but Root, not content with excelling only with the bat, showed his talent with the ball as well and sent both men spinning out before tea.

Indeed, Smith quickly joined them as Australia slumped to the interval on 136-6. It was the latest chapter in a long line of failed review for the Aussies with Smith adjudged to have got the faintest nick behind off Bresnan.

On Twitter, the Cricket Australia official feed called the decision "bullshit" - a reaction for which they quickly apologised.

But, while they may have been technically incorrect about Smith, there was no over-riding evidence to overturn the on-field not out decision given to Agar. 

Nevertheless, England reviewed on a whim and, despite there being nothing on HotSpot, a noise as the ball passed the bat was enough to convince the third umpire that Agar had been dismissed.

It was a harsh decision on the youngster - and, shortly afterwards, when Haddin was unable to review another Swann lbw, Australia were 162-8.

Finally, the hard work actually began as the hosts set about removing the Aussies' obdurate tail.

Siddle and Pattinson added 30 for the ninth wicket but, having been able to claim the extra half hour and take the new ball, England still had a good chance of finishing it off on the fourth evening.

Duly, they did - but only just, as Swann trapped Pattinson plumb lbw in the final over of the day, the 10th wicket having again put on 43 runs.

Immediately, the Notts bowler became the most popular man in the dressing room, preventing a return to the ground for a final day's play which could have potentially been over in one ball.

Undoubtedly, though, it was Root who deserved his man of the match honour, and his bright star is in stark contrast to the dearth of talent in the Aussie ranks.

Australia changed their coach just over two weeks before this series and the dislodged man, Mickey Arthur, is now taking legal action against his former employers, claiming the dismissal has damaged his reputation.

But it is going to take more than a change at the top to get to the bottom of what is wrong with Australian cricket.

England now find themselves on the verge of retaining the Ashes at the earliest possible opportunity, having gone 2-0 in a home Ashes series for the first time since 1890!

Victory at Lord's was also the first time since 1929 that England have won four Ashes Tests in a row. And, with Anderson and Swann now both gracing the top-ten list of England wicket-takers, it is fair to say that these are heady times for English cricket.

Only once before has a team come back from 2-0 down in an Ashes series to win - Australia in 1936-37 - and that team had the hardly small matter of Sir Donald Bradman to call upon.

And, as former England captain Mike Atherton sagely said in his report in the Times: "These Australians are no history boys in the making. Not in the winning sense, at any rate."

I actually have a ticket for the second day of the fourth Test at the Riverside in Chester-le-Street. By then, I suspect, the Aussies will just be playing, and praying, to keep the score down.

They singularly failed to that at Lord's over the last weekend. This was a thumping.



THE ASHES 2013
FIXTURES
10-14 JulyFirst Test: England 215 & 375 beat Australia 280 & 296 by 14 runsTrent Bridge
18-21 JulySecond Test: England 361 & 349-7d beat Australia 128 & 235 by 347 runsLord's
1-5 AugustThird TestOld Trafford
9-13 AugustFourth TestRiverside
21-25 AugustFifth TestThe Oval

CENTURIES
180 Joe Root (England), second Test
109 Ian Bell (England), first Test
109 Ian Bell (England), second Test

FIVE-WICKET HAULS (~ 10 wickets in the match)
5-44 Graeme Swann (England), second Test
5-50 Peter Siddle (Australia), first Test
5-72 Ryan Harris (Australia), second Test
~5-73 James Anderson (England), first Test
~5-85 James Anderson (England), first Test

Friday, 3 December 2010

The Ashes 2010/11: Clinical England complete thumping win in double-quick time

Result: England 620-5dec beat Australia 245 & 304 by an innings and 71 runs
Scorecard - BBC, Cricinfo

ENGLAND went 1-0 up in the Ashes with three matches to play after inflicting a thumping innings defeat on Australia in the second Test at Adelaide.

The tourists took less than 90 minutes on the final morning of the match to claim the last six Australian wickets in one of the most comprehensive Test victories in Ashes history.

Australia resumed on 238-4, still trailing England by 137 runs after losing their fourth wicket to the last ball on the fourth day when Michael Clarke was caught by Alastair Cook off Kevin Pietersen.

But the Aussies hoped they would still be able to come out with a frankly undeserved draw if Mike Hussey and Marcus North or Brad Haddin could produce a match-saving partnership.

An even bigger threat to England came from the forecast for rain but, at the start of play in day five, there was sunshine and idyllic blue skies above Adelaide.

However, the onus was still on the tourists to get the job done quickly.

England delivered on that front, and it meant they had dominated all five days of this match and the last two days of the previous one in Brisbane.

Steven Finn made the early breakthrough to become the leading wicket-taker on nine in this series alongside Graeme Swann - and this one was of particularly huge importance.

The dangerous Hussey had just made another 50 when he top-edged a shorter ball from Finn in an attempting a pull shot, only to see it fall into the hands of James Anderson at mid-on.

It did not take long for Haddin to fall next after Anderson, bowling another brilliant spell, drew him forward and induced an inside edge which was caught behind by Matt Prior.

Haddin had departed for just 12 and it looked like the beginning of the end for Australia who were 286-6.

Anderson then put himself on a hat-trick with his next ball as Ryan Harris became only the second ever Australian - after Adam Gilchrist - to get a king pair in Test cricket.

Harris, who was out lbw to Swann in the first innings, was trapped in front on his first ball again, offering no shot. Umpire Erasmus gave him out but Harris requested a video referral.

It showed exactly what England would want to see - an impact in line with the stumps to a ball pinning him back far enough to hit the top of them. Harris was out and he had burned one of Australia's reviews.

England made much better use of the review system two balls later when umpire Hill failed to heed a big shout by Swann for another lbw on North.

The replay again showed exactly what England had hoped to see: the ball hit pad before bat and it had been pitched in-line, hitting the stumps halfway up.

North was gone for 22 and Australia - who had failed to add a single run for the last three wickets - were 286-8.

Somehow Swann failed to pick up a second wicket in that over despite the fact that the ball came off the back of new batsmen Peter Siddle's foot and hit the stumps. Somehow, the ball had failed to dislodge the bails.

But, by this stage, England were so far on top that there was an air of inevitability about proceedings and, though Xavier Doherty bravely defended Anderson's hat-trick ball, he had no answer to Swann's spin.

Swann took an even more perfect off-spinners wicket to complete the victory, bowling Siddle through the gate and clipping the top of off-stump.

It meant that the Notts spinner ended the innings with 5-91, remarkably his 10th Test five-for in just 25 matches.

More importantly, it meant that England were 1-0 up having won a 'live' Ashes match in Australia for the first time since the successful 1986-87 tour.

And, without wanting to get too carried away on the basis of a single victory, England's win was so dominant that this match could be a watershed moment in the teams' rivalry.

It was Australia's first home innings defeat since the West Indies beat them at Perth in 1993 and, effectively, it means that England should expect more regular victories Down Under if the gap in quality between the two sides remains so stark.

This was the perfect session from England at the end of a perfect game. The only blot on the copybook came off the field with the news that Stuart Broad had sustained a stomach muscle strain and will be out for the rest of the series.

However, even then, England have replacements on tour in Chris Tremlett, Ajmal Shahzad and Tim Bresnan.

They will all battle it out for a place in the side for the third Test at Perth in the tour match against Victoria which starts on Friday.

Meanwhile, Australia will expect to make another raft of changes with Simon Katich out injured and Doherty almost certain to be dropped in favour of Nathan Hauritz.

There may be even more victims of the cull after a nightmare match for the Aussies.

Indeed, it was a nightmare from the start for Australia who won the toss, hoping to take advantage of a typically benign Adelaide wicket.

Katich, who is out of the rest of the series with an Achilles tear, was run out without facing a ball and skipper Ricky Ponting and Clarke were soon back in the pavilion.

Australia were 2-3 having made their worst start to a Test match in 60 years.

From there, Hussey steadied the ship with a top score in the innings of 93 but, once he was out with the score on 207-5, Australia's tail failed to wag and they were all out for 245 on the first day.

On days two and three, England showed Australia exactly how to bat in Adelaide as Cook and Jonathan Trott extended an unbeaten partnership which had started in Brisbane to 502 runs.

Cook made 148 and Trott was out for 78 in this Test but the star of the show was Pietersen hit 227 from 308 balls to record the biggest ever score by an England player in Adelaide.

Even when Cook departed, Pietersen was supported by Paul Collingwood who made 42 and Ian Bell who was eventually not out on 68.

And, on the morning of the fourth day, a quickfire partnership from Bell and Prior added another 52 off 34 balls to set up England's declaration on 620-5, only the third time that England had scored more than 600 against Australia.

Better still, England had scored quickly - at more than four an over - and their wonderfully positive batting display left the bowlers with almost two days to claim 10 Aussie wickets.

Australia reached lunch on day four at 78-0 but England burst into life after the interval to claim the wickets of Katich, Ponting and Shane Watson.

Hussey again attempted to steady the hosts and it looked as if he and Clarke would survive into the final day unscathed until Clarke got an inside edge on the last ball of the day.

That late wicket changed the complexion of the final day and it left the Aussies praying for rain or another outstanding partnership by Hussey and Haddin.

But, once those two had left North with the tail, there was thankfully only ever going to be one result.

England have got their just desserts for an outstanding performance over the past five days in which they have outclassed Australia in every department - batting, bowling and fielding.

Take a bow, lads.

EARLIER REPORTS
Day four: Pietersen keeps alive England victory hopes
(close) Australia 245 [Hussey 93, Haddin 56, Watson 51] & 238-4 [Clarke 80, Watson 57] v England 620-5d [Pietersen 227, Cook 148, Trott 78, Bell 68*]

KEVIN PIETERSEN took the wicket of Michael Clarke with the last ball of day four as England kept alive their hope of victory in the second Test in Adelaide.

The loss of Clarke, caught by Alastair Cook after a huge inside edge onto his thigh-pad, left Australia on 238-4, still 137 runs behind going into the final day.

Earlier, England had added 69 runs in nine overs to their overnight score of 551-4 with the loss of just one wicket, eventually declaring on 620-5.

It was the first time since 1964 that England had scored more than 600 runs in an innings against the Aussies, and the first time in Australia since 1928.

Indeed, those are the only two previous occasions that England had surpassed 600 in Ashes history.

For this third effort, England were largely indebted to Pietersen but he was finally out for 227 this morning.

Xavier Doherty was the man to take the wicket, the 18th time that Pietersen had got out to left-arm spin in his England Test career.

But, by then, the Surrey batsmen had already racked up his highest score in Tests while Doherty was still left with figures of 1-158. He is unlikely to be seen again in the third Test at Perth.

After Pietersen's departure, Ian Bell was joined in the middle by Matt Prior.

The pair played one-day shots to make a quickfire 52 stand from 34 balls and set up the declaration with the lead at 375 runs, the biggest lead for any touring side in Australia since England in February 1975.

The pressure now passed to the Aussies but the openers Shane Watson and Simon Katich coped well early on.

Only Graeme Swann looked particularly threatening though James Anderson and Stuart Broad both bowled tight lines to restrict Australia to 78-0 at lunch.

It was really no surprise that it was Swann who struck straight after lunch, Katich getting the faintest edge behind Prior to depart for 43.

But the Notts spinner had only just started and Aussie skipper Ponting was his next victim, caught in the slips by Paul Collingwood for just nine to complete a miserable match for him.

In the meantime, Watson had progressed tentatively to a half-century but the Queenslander is notorious for failing to convert his starts and once again he failed to kick on.

Young Steven Finn did the trick, dismissing the opener for 57 with Strauss taking the catch in the slips, making it the 13th time out of 15 that Watson has hit 50 but not recorded a century.

After that, Australia enjoyed their best period of the match so far, adding more than 100 for the fourth wicket as Clarke and Mike Hussey gradually reduced the arrears.

But, with the partnership on 104, Pietersen produced perhaps the pivotal moment as Clarke misread his off-spin from the final delivery of the day.

The wicket gives England real hope that they can complete a deserved victory in a Test which they have dominated for four days.

Indeed, if the bowlers can pull it off, it would be England's first meaningful away victory over Australia since the 1986-87 tour which was the last time England won a series Down Under.

However, Strauss' men face hurdles in the form of an obdurate Hussey and an unsettled weather forecast if they are to achieve their aim.

Six Aussie wickets stand between England a 1-0 away Ashes lead and it would help England's cause dearly if those wickets fell for fewer than the 137 runs which remain as a lead.

Find out from 11pm on SkySports 1 if the tourists can take that giant stride towards retaining the little urn.

Day three: Pietersen pulverises Aussies as England extend lead
(close) Australia 245 [Hussey 93, Haddin 56, Watson 51] v England 551-4 [Pietersen 213*, Cook 148, Trott 78]

KEVIN PIETERSEN scored an unbeaten double-century as England amassed a huge lead over Australia by batting through the curtailed third day of the second Test in Adelaide.

England closed the day on 551-4, 306 runs ahead, as Pietersen took over from where Cook left off for a welcome first three-figure score in Tests since March 2009.

Cook was finally out shortly after the resumption of play on day three, edging a fine Ryan Harris delivery to Brad Haddin behind the stumps for 148.

The wicket brought Cook's extraordinary series average tumbling down from 450 to a still remarkable 225.

It also finally extended the period in which Cook had not been on the field of play in this whole series beyond 11 overs. If anyone deserved to put their feet up for the rest of the day, it was the Essex man.

By the time Cook was dismissed, Pietersen had easily survived a ridiculous video referral for lbw which reeked of Aussie desperation as the ball clearly pitched outside of off-stump.

And the new Surrey batsmen had also brought up his first Test century since his injury and a subsequent loss of form.

It would seem that KP is back to his imperious best as he was joined in the middle by first Paul Collingwood and then Ian Bell.

Collingwood made a neat 42, taking England beyond 400 by lunch, before the Durham veteran was trapped lbw by Shane Watson at the start of the second session.

Bell then took up the supporting role, scoring an unbeaten 41, as Pietersen pushed England past the 500 mark with just less than an hour before tea.

It was the first time that England had scored successive totals of more than 500 since the 2002 series against Sri Lanka, and the first time ever against Australia.

For good measure, Pietersen and Bell added another 51 runs - and Pietersen brought up his double-ton with a single off Xavier Doherty - before the rain came to save the Aussie bowlers from a further flogging.

This is not a match which any of Australia's bowlers will remember fondly. Three of them - Doug Bollinger, Peter Siddle and Doherty - have now gone for at least 100 runs.

Doherty's 0-120 off 24 overs makes for particularly painful reading while Bollinger has 1-121 off 27 and Siddle has 0-100 off 26.

Harris has been the pick of the punch with 2-84 off 29 overs while Watson has not done too badly to take 1-44 off 19.

However, this has been a woeful effort overall from Australia whose frequent misfields have betrayed their lack of confidence.

It could yet be that the Aussies are saved by rain. There was no play on the third day after tea and further unsettled weather is forecasted for the final two days.

If England are beaten by the weather and only manage a draw, it would go down as one of the most unjustified results in Ashes history.

England have dominated this Test match since its first over when Simon Katich and Ricky Ponting were dismissed. Cook, Pietersen and James Anderson have all been magnificent.

So, for time reasons, Andrew Strauss should declare on 551-4 before the start of play on day four as there is no way England are going to get bowled out by this Aussie 'attack'.

It would maximise the amount of time for Anderson, Stuart Broad, Steven Finn and Graeme Swann to bowl Australia out again, most probably for an innings victory.

Pietersen has noted that the Adelaide pitch has started to deteriorate and turn, which could be the cue for Swann to make his first big impression on the series.

And for psychological and historical reasons, declaring on a score of 551 would go a long way to burying the Test which England tossed away in Adelaide four years ago.

Then, England declared on 551-6 before being bowled out for 127 in their second innings on their way to losing by six wickets.

Of course, there is a no danger of a repeat of that this time.

Day two: Majestic England take complete control
(close) Australia 245 [Hussey 93, Haddin 56, Watson 51] v England 317-2 [Cook 136*, Pietersen 85*, Trott 78]

ENGLAND showed Australia how to bat in Adelaide as the tourists took complete control on the second day of the second Test.

More big records fell to opener Alastair Cook, and he was ably supported again by Jonathan Trott and Kevin Pietersen, as England closed on 317-2, already a lead of 72.

Essex left-hander Cook overtook Wally Hammond to hold the England record for the most runs without dismissal and he is also now ahead of Nasser Hussain for minutes batted without being out.

For the record, Cook has scored 371 runs over 1022 minutes since the second innings in Brisbane.

But the morning actually did not start well for England and captain Andrew Strauss was out for one in the first over of the day as the Aussies looked for early wickets to forge a comeback.

Strauss misjudged a good length delivery from Doug Bollinger thinking the bounce off the pitch would take it over the wickets when, in fact, it clipped the top of off-stump.

England could have been two wickets down as Trott survived on two separate occasions shortly afterwards.

First, Trott set off for a single that was never there and was only saved by Xavier Doherty's failure to replicate Trott's fine throw from square leg.

Then, three overs later, Trott presented a thick outside edge to Mike Hussey at gully off Bollinger but the Western Australia man put down the straight-forward chance.

But, having ridden his luck in the early part of his innings, Trott was able to reprise the big partnership which he held with Cook at Brisbane.

There, the pair compiled an unbeaten second-wicket stand of 329, the highest partnership for any wicket in Tests at the Gabba.

This time in Adelaide, Cook and Trott put on 173, taking England well beyond lunch and breaking the record stand for any wicket by an English pair in Adelaide.

Over the two innings together, the two men had scored 502 runs over almost 10 hours of play and, all the while, Pietersen had sat in the pavilion with his pads on in case of wicket.

To the relief of the home support, their odyssey was finally over shortly before tea as Trott, on 78, attempted a misjudged loft over midwicket off Ryan Harris' bowling, only to be caught by Michael Clarke.

Pietersen emerged to pantomime villain boos before going on to play a similar innings to Trott - skittish at the start then growing in composure.

It is only fair to expect Pietersen to be a little nervous after waiting so long to make an appearance and the Aussies focused all their attention on getting the talisman out cheaply.

Skipper Ricky Ponting brought on the left-arm spin of Doherty, Pietersen's Achilles' heel, and even allowed Cook a 'free' single to bring his new partner on strike.

It was one of a myriad of slightly odd decisions made by Ponting who went through a spell, most probably in desperation, of asking his bowlers to bowl short to all sorts of unorthodox fields.

Needless to say, none of it worked and England reached tea on 198-2, a deficit of just 47.

After the interval, there was more of the same for England. Indeed, it got easier still for the tourists as the hosts tired in the field, their bowlers unable to make a further breakthrough.

England scored 119 runs in the final session and Cook brought up his 15th Test century with a cut through backward point before Pietersen recorded his 21st half-century with an on-drive.

England finished the day in an almost unassailable position at 317-2 and a huge first innings lead looms if Cook continues his vigil at the crease throughout the third day.

It looks as if Australia will have to bat the best part of two days, perhaps slightly more, just to get a draw from this match.

Of course, England pulled off that feat at Brisbane and carried through their form to Adelaide.

But these are unusually testing times for Australia and their second innings will give England's bowling attack a massive chance to prove its worth again.

Day one: England capitalise on cracking start
(close): Australia 245 [Hussey 93, Haddin 56, Watson 51] v England 1-0

JAMES ANDERSON gave England a brilliant start to the second Test as the tourists took control at Adelaide by bowling Australia out on the first day.

Anderson spearheaded the bowling attack, striking from the start and eventually taking figures of 4-51 as England dominated.

The narrative of this match comes somewhat as a surprise after Australia won the toss and unsurprisingly elected to bat on a wicket which has become notorious for being as flat as a road.

But, within 15 minutes of play starting, the hosts were in turmoil at 2-3 having made their worst start to a Test innings since 1950.

The first wicket fell to the fourth ball of the day but had nothing to do with the pitch as Simon Katich was run out for 0.

Katich's had hesitated on his run and it cost him dearly as he became the first opener in Ashes Tests since Wayne Phillips in 1984 to be out without having even received a ball.

But much credit must be given to Jonathan Trott for a tremendous throw which directly hit the side of stumps from 15 yards.

It was 0-2 after the next ball as Aussie skipper Ricky Ponting went for a golden duck, edging Anderson to Graeme Swann at second slip.

And the same two players combined again in the third over, as the out-of-form Michael Clarke edged to Swann off Anderson for 2.

At this point, Watson was joined in the middle by Mike Hussey who just fell short of a double-ton in Brisbane, but England were still sensing more early wickets.

Watson survived an lbw shout as England blew their first video referral on a ball that was in-line but always too high to hit the stumps.

Then Hussey had two narrow escapes. First, Anderson could not hold on to an extremely tough catch down to his left off his own bowling.

And, shortly afterwards, another edge off Anderson fell just short of Swann who was already looking for his third catch.

However, having seen off the threat of the new ball, Watson and Hussey belatedly settled down and started playing some decent shots to build a much-needed 92 partnership.

That took the Aussies to 94-3 at lunch but England knew they would remain in control of the match with another flurry of wickets at the start of the second session.

The early wicket duly arrived and Anderson claimed his third victim of the Test when Watson sliced a ball wide of off-stump straight to Kevin Pietersen at gully.

But Hussey was gently easing Australia back into the match and even under pressure man Marcus North seemed to benefit from his presence.

Hussey and North were eyeing the tea break having taken Australia past 150 but North could not survive, edging behind to wicket-keeper Matt Prior off the bowling of Steven Finn.

That left the Aussies on 159-5 at tea but North's dismissal also reunited Hussey with Brad Haddin, the pair having enjoyed a partnership worth 307 runs in Brisbane.

In a post-tea lull for England, Hussey and Haddin again looked solid, taking Australia beyond 200. However, this time, the partnership lasted a mere 51 runs as Hussey fell short of a landmark again.

After scoring 193 in the first Test, Hussey was out for 93 on this occasion, edging Swann's spin to Paul Collingwood at slip.

And Swann then put himself in with the chance of the second hat-trick of this Ashes series by trapping Ryan Harris lbw on his first ball.

Harris requested a video referral, claiming there was an inside edge, but hot-spot showed no evidence of this and he became the Aussies' third duck of the innings.

Xavier Doherty survived the hat-trick ball but those two quick wickets left Australia back in serious trouble at 207-7.

Shortly afterwards, the roof well and truly fell in on Aussie attempts to post a creditable score as Doherty was run out for six on a dreadful day between the wickets for the hosts.

Like Katich at the start of the day, Doherty appeared stuck in quicksand as Haddin called for a single, leaving Andrew Strauss with enough time to find Alastair Cook at short-leg. Cook passed the ball to Prior who whipped off the bails to leave Australia on 226-8.

Peter Siddle was next to go for three as Anderson re-entered the fray to claim his fourth wicket of the day, Cook taking the catch at midwicket.

And it was all over in the next over when Haddin skied a Stuart Broad delivery into the hands of Finn for only Broad's second wicket of the series so far.

England had bowled magnificently - all four bowlers took at least one wicket - and Anderson was the star of the show thanks to his aggressive bowling with the new ball.

Fears that neither of these teams would be able to take 20 wickets in a match have been allayed in the England camp, for now at least, and the onus has passed onto the batsmen.

Strauss, Cook and Trott all made big scores in Brisbane to ensure the first Test was a draw but Australia's sub-par score means that this is a big chance for a first meaningful away win in the Ashes since 1987.

England will be looking to their top-order players to carry their form into this match to take it out of reach for the Aussies.

After all, only a small lead may not be enough when considering the fact that it would leave plenty of a time in a game in which England would have to bat last and chase down a score.

But, at this point, the pressure is massively on Australia and their modified bowling attack, Mitchell Johnson and Ben Hilfenhaus having been replaced by Harris and Doug Bollinger.

Ponting really needs his bowlers to deliver for him this time, and the Aussie skipper showed the strain by firing a few angry words in the direction of Strauss as England walked off on 1-0 at the close.

It always looks good for a team when they have the opposition captain rattled and England would seem to have Australia right where they want them.

Friday, 17 July 2009

The Ashes - Second Test: Freddie five-for gives England a fine win

England 425 & 311-6 dec beat Australia 215 & 406 by 115 runs
Scorecard

ANDREW 'Freddie' Flintoff took a five-for on his final appearance at Lord's as England completed a comprehensive win against Australia in the second Test to lead the series 1-0.

Man of the match Flintoff finished with figures of 5-92 as England won an Ashes Test at HQ for the first time since 1934.

In a complete turnaround from the first Test in Cardiff which the Aussies dominated, England similarly were in control throughout this match.

And it was apt that Flintoff should provide the coup-de-grace after he announced his retirement from Test cricket at the end of this series in the run-up to Lord's.

Flintoff took three wickets on the final morning to kill off the threat of what would have been a remarkable Aussie comeback.

Brad Haddin was out to Flintoff's first over of the day without adding to his overnight score of 80.

He later bowled out tailenders Nathan Hauritz for one and Peter Siddle for seven.

But the contribution of Notts spinner Graeme Swann was just as important, if not more so.

Shortly after Haddin's dismissal, Michael Clarke's imperious stand of 136 came to an end after Swann bowled him through the gate.

And Swann took the last wicket, that of Mitchell Johnson who had batted well for his 63.

Australia began the last day requiring 209 more runs for a world record fourth innings chase after being set 522 to win by Andrew Strauss's declaration on 311-6.

The early wickets on Sunday of Simon Katich, Philip Hughes, Ricky Ponting, Mike Hussey and Marcus North left Australia on 128-5.

The clatter of Aussie wickets seemed to have vindicated Strauss's decision not to enforce the follow-on after his innings of 161 had helped England to a first innings lead of 210.

But Clarke and Haddin batted for the rest of the day as Australia reached 313-5 at the close of day four and there was easily enough time for them to pull off the momentous win.

The early loss of Haddin unsettled Clarke, however, and once he had followed, it became only a matter of whether Flintoff could get his name on the Lord's honours board.

Flintoff duly delivered to give England a well-deserved win.

After their lucky escape in Cardiff, and having won the toss, it was important that England's top-order batsmen performed better.

A fine opening partnership of 196 between Strauss and Alastair Cook was an ideal start but the Aussies came back in the final session to restrict England to 364-6 on the first day.

Once again, the tail added vital runs with another last-wicket stand - this time between James Anderson and debutant Graham Onions - pushing England's total past 400 on the second morning.

Anderson then showed his worth as a seamer by removing Philip Hughes and Ricky Ponting to leave Australia on 10-2.

Then, once Onions broke a stand of 93 for the third-wicket between Simon Katich and Mike Hussey, the floodgates opened and Australia finished day two on 156-8.

Onions cleaned up the final two wickets within the opening hour of day three but Strauss, recognising there was plenty of time left in the game, decided to bat again.

Rapid half-centuries in the evening session from Matt Prior and Paul Collingwood justified the decision as England built up a mammoth advantage.

This set up the declaration and the arrival to centre stage of match-winner Flintoff.

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EARLIER CLOSE OF PLAY REPORTS
Day Four (close)
England 435 [Strauss 161, Cook 95] & 311-6 dec [Prior 61, Collingwood 54] v Australia 215 [Hussey 51] & 313-5 [Clarke 125*, Haddin 80*]

DEFIANT Aussie batsmen Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin shared an unbeaten 185 partnership to put England's victory charge on hold on day four of the second Test at Lord's.

Clarke and Haddin arrived at the crease with the tourists in deep trouble on 128-5 after England's bowlers made early inroads.

But some fine batting took Australia within 209 runs of a truly remarkable win as they closed on 313-5.

With the start of play delayed due to bad weather for 15 minutes, captain Andrew Strauss declared on the overnight score of 311-6.

This gave England a lead of 521, with the previous successful record fourth innings chase in Tests being 418 by West Indies against the Aussies in 2003.

The declaration looked to have paid dividends when a fiery Andrew Flintoff, playing in his final Lord's Test, took both openers' wickets.

Simon Katich was out to an uncharacteristic loose shot which was taken by Kevin Pietersen. He was followed shortly afterwards by Philip Hughes who was caught in the slips by Strauss.

Both wickets had an element of controversy to them. Flintoff was shown to have overstepped and bowled a no-ball to Katich while replays suggest Hughes' shot had touched the ground before Strauss took it.

Australia captain Ricky Ponting told young Hughes to stand his ground to cat-calls from the crowd but the umpires in the middle remained unmoved.

Matters got better still for England after lunch when Ponting played onto his stumps off Stuart Broad on 38.

Then a dangerous-looking stand of 42 for the fourth wicket was broken when Mike Hussey was caught by Paul Collingwood off Graeme Swann's spin for 27.

Swann struck again to remove the nervous Marcus North for six as England eyed victory within four days.

But Clarke signalled his intention early on with three sumptuous cover drives and he found a like-minded batting companion in Haddin.

Eventually, England resorted to waiting for the new ball before using the threat of Flintoff and Anderson to try and take the remaining wickets.

But, frustratingly, only six overs were available before bad light stopped play for the night, leaving the match intriguingly poised.

With the ball still new and the bowlers rested, England remain favourites for a first Ashes win at Lord's since 1934.

But Strauss and the bowlers will only get more nervous as Australia put more runs on the board and get closer to their record-breaking target.

Day Three (close)
England 435 [Strauss 161, Cook 95] & 311-6 [Prior 61, Collingwood 54] v Australia 215 [Hussey 51]

ENGLAND built up a huge lead of 521 as they reached 311-6 at close on the third day of the second Test at Lord's.

Half centuries from Matt Prior and Paul Collingwood have arguably taken the match away from Australia who had earlier conceded a first innings deficit of 210.

England skipper Andrew Strauss elected not to enforce the follow-on after Graham Onions took the tourists' two remaining wickets in the opening hour.

Instead, England batted again with the aim of achieving an impenetrable lead.

Openers Strauss and Alastair Cook made an encouraging start and reached lunch on 57-0 before both departed on 32 in quick succession to Nathan Hauritz.

This brought to the crease the start of England's fragile middle order and, once again, Ravi Bopara and Kevin Pietersen scrapped around, looking for their best form.

Bopara never found his and looped an easy catch to Simon Katich on 27 as brave Hauritz picked up his third wicket of the innings despite bowling with a dislocated middle finger.

Pietersen was out shortly afterwards, caught behind by Brad Haddin off Peter Siddle's bowling for 44.

But, more importantly, the run rate had worryingly dropped below three-an-over just when England should have been pressing home their advantage.

Prior and Collingwood recognised this and scored at five-an-over to move the momentum back firmly in England's favour.

England's lead was already 470 when Prior was run out on 61 from just 42 balls by Marcus North's remarkable direct hit, thrown from deep point.

Collingwood was out for 54, caught behind by Haddin off Siddle, from what was the last ball of the day as heavy rain brought a premature halt to proceedings.

England must feel they have just about done enough with the bat and the bowlers will be eager to start taking the 10 Aussie wickets.

But, with so much time in the match still left still left, Strauss may ask his remaining batsmen to continue for some of the morning session to kill off Australia's slim chances completely.

Day Two (close)
England 435 [Strauss 161, Cook 95] v
Australia 156-8 [M Hussey 51; Anderson 4-36]

JAMES Anderson took four wickets to put England in firm control of the second Test at close on day two.

The Burnley Express finished the day with 4-36 as Australia collapsed from 103-2 to 156-8 at stumps, still 70 adrift of the follow-on target.

After his match-saving antics with Monty Panesar in the first Test, Anderson had also contributed earlier in the day with the bat as England look to secure a first win against Australia at Lord's in 75 years.

He scored 29 runs as part of another fine last wicket stand of 47, this time partnered by debutant Graham Onions.

But, resuming on 364-6, England endured early disappointment when they lost skipper Andrew Strauss, on a magnificent 161, to the second ball of the day when he was bowled by Ben Hilfenhaus.

Graeme Swann followed in the next over, caught by Aussie captain Ricky Ponting off Peter Siddle's bowling for four.

And in the third over, England lost their third wicket when Stuart Broad also fell victim to Hilfenhaus for 16.

It left England on 378-9 and unlikely to make 400 despite having been 196-0 and 222-1 during the innings.

But Anderson and Onions cared little for that assumption and took England to 425 before Anderson was finally out, caught by Mike Hussey off Mitchell Johnson's bowling.

If Australia felt that they had finally got a foothold in this match by bowling England out in the opening hour, they were wrong.

By lunch, the Aussies were 22-2 having been 10-2 at one stage as Anderson started aggressively and struck twice early in the innings.

First, Philip Hughes was caught behind by Matt Prior for four. Then Ponting was out for two, given out after his opposite number Strauss took a catch in the slips.

Ponting was not happy with the decision and replays indeed showed he had not hit the ball but that he should have been given out lbw anyway.

A post-lunch recovery was staged by Simon Katich and Hussey who recorded a 93 partnership for the third wicket despite two breaks for rain.

Onions made the vital breakthrough but much of the credit must go to Broad who came in from the deep to make an excellent diving catch to dismiss Katich for 48.

Hussey followed shortly afterwards for 51 as he left a good length ball from Andrew Flintoff which clipped the top of off-stump to leave Australia on 111-4.

With the partnership broken, the floodgates opened.

The Aussies had failed to get off the dreaded 111 when Michael Clarke departed for one run having given Alastair Cook a simple catch at short midwicket as Anderson took his third.

Anderson's fourth followed soon after as Marcus North went for a 14-ball duck, playing an over-eager attempted pull shot onto his stumps.

And the dangerous Mitchell Johnson went cheaply for four when he failed to deal with Broad's short delivery, succeeding only in top-edging it to Cook.

Before the day was finished, Cook snaffled his third catch of the innings as Brad Haddin was dismissed for 28.

Haddin complained about the light after he had similarly failed to deal with a short ball from Broad and, irritatingly for the Aussie keeper, play was brought to an end for the day just ten minutes later.

It had comfortably been England's best day of the series so far as, in all, 12 wickets fell in overcast conditions at Lord's.

If the skies above London remain as bleak as Australia's prospects and England can take the two remaining wickets early enough, the follow-on will come in for serious consideration.

But, weather permitting, England have more than enough time to bat again and compile an impenetrable lead on day three before Anderson and co attack the Aussies again on Sunday.