Fast bowler Peter Siddle was excluded while inexperienced all-rounder John Hastings found a berth in Australia’s 15-man World Cup squad that was annunced here Tuesday. Skipper Ricky Ponting and veteran Michael Hussey were named in the squad despite injuries. Ponting is recovering from a finger fracture while Hussey suffered a serious hamstring injury Sunday. Hussey [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Brad Haddin’
Hastings in Australia’s World Cup squad, Siddle dropped
Spinner Hauritz to be part of Oz squad against Windies
Australian captain Ricky Ponting has confirmed that off-spinner Nathan Hauritz will be a part of the first Test squad taking on the West Indies at the Gabba in Brisbane on Thursday.
Pacer Doug Bollinger will be the 12th man, while the other quicks featuring in the team would be Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus, [...]
IPL riches turning Test players into poor cousins
The overused argument that only by excelling for a national side can a player become valuable in an auction of the lucrative Indian Premier League (IPL), is fast losing credibility, at least in the Australian context.
Australia’s current Test players are being identified as the poor cousins of fellow players like out of favour all-rounder Andrew [...]
Haddin first-choice wicketkeeper for Windies Test series
Australian wicket keeper Brad Haddin has said that he had received a call from chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch, which confirmed that he was the first-choice wicketkeeper despite Tim Paine and Graham Manou performing well during his absence.
“This is when Tim Paine broke down after a couple of games in India. I told Digger I [...]
Tendulkar returns to top 10 of Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings
Indian opening bat Sachin Tendulkar has returned to the top 10 of the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI batsmen for the first time in 10 months after scoring his 44th one-day century for India.
The century earned his team a 46-run victory over Sri Lanka in the final of the Compaq tri-series in Colombo [...]
Johnson will come good – Haddin
Third Ashes Test, Edgbaston: England v Australia
Dates: Thursday, 30 July to Monday, 3 August Start time: 1100 BST
Coverage: Live Test Match Special commentary (from 1025 BST on day one, 1045 BST on remaining days) on BBC Radio 4 LW, 5 Live sports extra, the Red Button and BBC Sport website. Live text commentary on BBC Sport website and mobile phones. Also live on Sky Sports.

Australian wicketkeeper Brad Haddin has played down concerns over the form of pace bowler Mitchell Johnson ahead of the third Ashes Test at Edgbaston.
Highly-rated Johnson has struggled for consistency so far in the series but Haddin still feels the 27-year-old left-armer has plenty to offer.
"He’s still taking wickets for us and in his game he still feels pretty comfortable," said Haddin.
"From where I’m standing his pace is still up and it’s all pretty good."
The form of Johnson has been one of the major talking points regarding the Australian side after the Tests at Cardiff and Lord’s.
Johnson came into the tour with a reputation as one of the world’s fiercest wicket takers following an impressive tour of South Africa which saw him spearhead the victorious Australian attack, taking 16 wickets at an average of 25 in the three Tests.
However, in Cardiff his accuracy deserted him as the Australian’s were unable to bowl England out to secure victory, and at Lord’s he was costly as the home side secured a 115-run win and a 1-0 lead in the series.
So far he has taken eight wickets at 41.37 and his place is under threat with the potential return of Stuart Clark and Shane Watson from injury.
OLIVER BRETT’S BLOG
However, Haddin feels there are mitigating circumstances surrounding Johnson’s performances and has backed him to rediscover his previous form.
"Obviously he’s had a very successful time with the Australian team, his bowling was outstanding in South Africa," said Haddin.
"I don’t see that much of a difference to now, obviously there was different conditions in South Africa that allowed the ball to swing a little bit more and we’re using different balls here that are probably starting to swing a little bit later.
"As much as has been written about him not performing, he’s still taking a lot of wickets and he bowled great in the tour game."
In the recent tour match against Northants at Wantage Road, which Australia won by 135 runs, Johnson finished with match figures of 1-107 from 18.1 overs, only claiming one tail-end wicket – whilst fellow seamer Clark claimed 4-74 from 23 overs.
Clark, who took an impressive 26 wickets at 17 in the 2006/07 Ashes series where Australia whitewashed the touring England side 5-0, is now fully fit following an elbow injury that kept him out of the home and away series against South Africa.
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After playing in both of Australia’s pre-Ashes tour matches against Sussex and the England Lions but overlooked for both Cardiff and Lord’s, 33-year-old Clark believes he is the man to turn the series around for the tourists.
"I’m older and I get the ball to bounce a little bit more (than the other Australia bowlers), being a little bit taller," said Clark. "That’s probably my biggest weapon on these wickets. It can make you a handful."
"I’ve sat on the sidelines and watched, and it’s been pretty hard to do that for two Test matches.
"I may have to watch for the next three – but I’m going to do everything in my power to make sure I control my destiny."
Australia coach Tim Nielsen admits that Clark is one potential, attractive option available to the side, but more important is the need for the bowlers to simply perform better than in the first two Tests.
"He (Clark) was right in the mix for the first two Tests," said Nielsen. "He brings us height, bounce and accuracy.
"Johnson brings us real pace and left arm; (Peter) Siddle keeps hammering away all day at 145 (kph) plus, (Ben) Hilfenhaus is an outswing bowler and even Andrew McDonald’s come in and bowled beautifully, got 70 opening the batting – he’s done nothing but push his claims.
"The attractive option Watson brings is his batting and bowling as an all-round player.
"We know we have the options. Our challenge is just to bowl better than we did at Lord’s."
One bowler who remains absent from the Australian side is Brett Lee, whose rib injury prevented him from playing against Northants and looks likely to keep him out of action at Edgbaston.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Flintoff vows to finish Ashes job
• All-rounder confident his body will hold out in last three Tests
• Pietersen’s achilles injury is a worry for Andy Flower
Andrew Flintoff last night pledged himself to complete the Ashes series after his heroic bowling performance had inspired England to their first victory over Australia at Lord’s for 75 years. Flintoff bowled flat out and unchanged for 10 overs from the Pavilion End, taking three for 43 to complete figures of five for 92 as England won by 115 runs to take a 1-0 lead in the series.
With Graeme Swann picking up the other two wickets it was all over 17 minutes before lunch. It was Flintoff’s third five-wicket return for England and his first since the 2005 Ashes. He dismissed widespread speculation this would be his last Test. “I said before this match that these were going to be my last four Test matches,” he said. “I’ve got three to go. I will do anything to get out on the field and finish this series.”
Kevin Pietersen has also been playing through pain and he looks set to miss next week’s third Test at Edgbaston because of his achilles problem, with Warwickshire’s Ian Bell his likely replacement. “He’s been struggling with that achilles and been in a lot of pain,” England’s team director, Andy Flower, said. Flower spoke after the game of assessing the injury but Pietersen is understood to have concluded that he needs a break in the hope of returning for the final two Tests.
Flintoff looks England’s more potent match-winner. His right knee has replaced his left ankle as the body part selectors and fans are most worried about and he had injections before this game. Flower said Flintoff’s condition would be monitored carefully. “He’s got to be able to guarantee he can last a full game. We’ll get medical advice to see if that is a probability.”
• Duncan Fletcher: Strauss not the captain under pressure
• Paul Hayward: Flintoff takes it on himself to end Lord’s run
• Kevin Mitchell: Cricket’s spirit ground into dust by skippers
The player himself feels confident that his fitness will hold out. “The encouraging thing from my point of view is that I bowled all my overs. I was in a bit of discomfort but I’ve played most of my career in discomfort. So that’s nothing new.
“I know where I am with it. There are a couple of twinges in the knee. However, it’s encouraging that I can run in and bowl the number of overs I have done today. It bodes well for three more Test matches. I want to play a major part in them and in the team’s success. It’s not my intention to bow out at Lord’s. I want to be in an Ashes-winning team come the last Test at The Oval. That would be the perfect way to go.”
The opposing captain, Ricky Ponting, placed Flintoff alongside the world’s best fast bowlers of recent years for being able to deliver a spell of sustained pace and aggression. “Curtly Ambrose wasn’t bad at it, Courtney Walsh wasn’t bad at it, Wasim Akram wasn’t bad at it. We’ve all faced great bowling attacks.
“We’ve all encountered very good spells of fast bowling throughout our careers. There’s no doubt when Andrew’s up and running, and there’s a game on the line, he’s the one who wants the ball, and I guess the England captain is always going to throw him the ball in that situation. He did what we expected him to do through the course of this game. We heard with his retirement that he was going to give his absolute all for the remaining few Test matches, and he’s started off well again in this game.”
This is the first time since 1997 that England have taken a 1-0 lead in an Ashes series. But Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin had played so well on Sunday that it gave Australia far-fetched hopes of pulling off a breathtaking win by achieving a record fourth-innings target.
England’s captain, Andrew Strauss, admitted yesterday his sleep had been disturbed the night before. “But I was still very confident that we were going to win today. As is always the case when you play in an Ashes Test, there are always twists and turns. We put the Aussies under pressure for the first 3½ days. They always come back at you at some stage and they did that yesterday. But to go 1-0 up is all we can ask for. And if we continue to play that consistent, positive cricket, we’ll put them under pressure again.”
Flintoff vows to finish the job
• Relive all the final-day drama with our Lord’s video highlights
• Andrew Strauss hails ‘magnificent’ Flintoff after 115-run win
These are the days where the sporting gods are cruel. They dare to spin dreams and then crush them. First Tom Watson at Turnberry, and Lance Armstrong in the Alps, and now Australia at the English citadel they have made impregnable for the past three-quarters of a century. Australia, who even with innermost turmoils, never ever display anything but the utter conviction of their right to dominate, arrived here today believing they could overturn a century and more of Test history and with an unfeasible run chase to win a match that was unwinnable.
One hundred and five minutes later they were all out for 406, England triumphant by 115 runs, and the dream lay in tatters, blown away by a raging bull called Flintoff, in his Lord’s Test match swansong, and an upstart Swann having the time of his life. Andrew Flintoff rampaged in from the Pavilion end unchanged and unbowed since he took the new ball six overs before the close of play on Sunday. The three wickets he took today, beginning with that of Brad Haddin with his fourth ball and without addition to the score, and ending when he uprooted the stumps of Peter Siddle, gave him morning figures of 10-1-43-3 and five for 92 in all, the third five-wicket haul of his Test career and his first since The Oval against this same opposition four years ago. If he milked each wicket for all it was worth, hamming it up for the crowd, posturing and posing, then this was glorious teeth-jarring fast bowling, not a thing of beauty but driven by brute force and personality.
At one time, Andrew Strauss, sensing his steam running out, and wishing to protect him from himself, tried to suggest he might hand over to another. The captain was forced to hold his hands up in reluctant acceptance of the inevitable: he might as well have tried to stop the tide. Those who know Flintoff understand that the announcement of his retirement from Tests at the end of this series would impel him to greater things and, through him, perhaps the team. It has proved thus. He has earned a place on both bowling and batting honours boards, a double given to very few.
It was Graeme Swann, though, who cleared the passage to the win and then administered the coup de grâce. For more than five hours Michael Clarke had batted sublimely, and now he had the chance to complete one of the finest match-winning innings in history. Jimmy Anderson’s urgent opening burst had been repelled, and now Strauss turned not to another seamer but to Swann, whose Ashes debut jitters in Cardiff had held him back. Clarke had played him beautifully, twinkling feet and deft angles. This time he danced down to the second ball which drifted away from him at the last moment, eluded the outside edge before spinning back to hit off-stump.
The off-spinner kept his nerve at the end, too, when Mitchell Johnson, a bowler in tatters but dangerous batsman with a Test hundred in South Africa and now 63 good runs to his name, had licence to throw the bat in one last effort. Swann fired one in flatter, through the arc of the swing and took out middle. Four for 87 was his reward and proof that off-spin should not just be bowled dogmatically from the Pavilion end: if it spins it will turn up the slope sufficient enough while the same slope will help an armball.
If England leave here with some concerns, and will certainly consider a change for the third Test at Edgbaston in days time – probably in the form of Steve Harmison for Graham Onions – then it is Australia who are in disarray. Their batting is sound, although the manner in which Phillip Hughes has been hounded and harried makes the lack of a third opener in the touring party a concern, sound enough indeed to make 674 for five in Cardiff and 406 in the fourth innings here.
The bowling, though, is a disaster, with Johnson’s timing, an essential ingredient in an unorthodox method, totally out of kilter and his confidence in the basement, while Siddle has huffed and puffed but blown down only Swann’s Cardiff house. They have few places to which to turn with Brett Lee unlikely to play in the game against Northamptonshire that starts on Friday and therefore too high a risk for Edgbaston, and the need to retain Johnson if the lower order is not to be weakened, but to have the option of a fourth seamer should his woes continue. The performance of the all-rounder Shane Watson will be intriguing for he might be pencilled in to replace Marcus North at six and bring a further bowling option.
Hindsight for England says that Harmison would have been a decent pick for this match, his pace and bounce a better option than Onions, who could not quite find the consistency of line and length that can create pressure and bring wickets. He cannot be expected to blast out batsmen. Edgbaston may not offer steepling bounce but no Australian batsman will relish the prospect of Harmison at the top of his game.
Meanwhile, there is the chance now to rest and recuperate: Flintoff his knee, the toss up being whether it is his knee or his gin and tonic which receives the most ice; Kevin Pietersen his achilles tendons that so restricted him in this match; Onions his sore elbow that kept him from the field on the fourth evening. And for Ravi Bopara to reflect that style is no substitute for substance. He has much to learn if No3 is to be his position.
first Test win against Australia at the Lord’s in 75 years
London, Jul 20 (PTI) An inspired England recorded their first Test win against Australia at the Lord’s in 75 years as they pulled off stunning 115-run victory in the second Test and take a 1-0 lead in the Ashes series here today.
Chasing a record 522 for victory, the Australians put up a brave fight with [...]
Flintoff fires England to Lord’s victory
• Relive all the final-day drama with our Lord’s video highlights
• Andrew Strauss hails ‘magnificent’ Flintoff after 115-run win
You are not supposed to be able to tinker with fate. But Andrew Flintoff is doing his best.
This morning he bowled England to victory in the Lord’s Test. A couple of times Andrew Strauss tried to take him off without much conviction. But Flintoff would not allow it. In a spell reminiscent of The Oval in 2005 Flintoff pounded in until the job was done. In the process he took five wickets in an innings for only the fourth time in his career.
There were nerves jangling around Lord’s when play resumed with Australia 209 runs away from victory and England five wickets. Those home nerves eased considerably after the fourth ball of Flintoff’s first over. Brad Haddin jabbed outside the off-stump and Paul Collingwood took the catch at second slip.
This wicket provided crucial early respite but no certainty. Haddin’s replacement Mitchell Johnson can bat all right – after a torrid start against Flintoff he proved the point. With Clarke remaining restrained but composed the Australians had reached 356 by noon and the innings was gaining momentum again. Strauss turned to Graeme Swann.
Swann’s first ball was a full toss. But Clarke could not miss the fielder at extra cover. His second delivery looked like a full toss and Clarke missed the ball. Perhaps it drifted away; perhaps Clarke was being greedy. He was bowled and now England really were in charge.
Johnson swung defiantly, but Flintoff still pounded in from the Pavilion, whether Strauss liked it or not (he probably did), and shattered the stumps of Nathan Hauritz and Peter Siddle. A few more swings from Johnson and it was all over. Attempting to smash a quicker delivery from Swann into the Mound Stand, Johnson swung and missed, and the celebrations could begin.
Thus England won by 115 runs, a massive margin by the standards of recent Ashes Tests in this country, though there were times when it seemed closer than that. Edgbaston cannot come along quick enough for England except for their supermen, Flintoff – and Kevin Pietersen – who need to time to attend to their bodies.
Flintoff inspires England victory
Second Ashes Test, Lord’s (day five):
England 425 & 311-6 dec beat Australia 215 & 406
Match scorecard

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Lord’s
England took a 1-0 lead in the Ashes series and ended a 75-year wait for a win against Australia at Lord’s as they wrapped up a 115-run win before lunch on the final day of the second Test.
Andrew Flintoff, in his final Test appearance at the famous old ground, defied his injuries to take three of the five wickets England needed in an extraordinary 10-over spell to finish with 3-43 on the day and 5-92 in the innings.
What promised to be a nervy morning for England fans soon became a more pleasant prospect when Flintoff, with a typically inspirational spell of Ashes bowling, picked up a wicket with his fourth ball of the day, the 10th in all.
Flintoff had Brad Haddin, who had survived for more than three hours on Sunday, caught at second slip by Paul Collingwood for 80 and Australia were 313-6, still 209 runs away from completing an all-time record chase in a Test match.
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Mitchell Johnson came in and rode his luck, adding 43 with overnight hero Michael Clarke. He eventually finished with 63, playing some fine shots towards the end, as Australia were bowled out for 406.
But it was Clarke who was the second man to fall in the day, for 136, when he tried an ambitious shot in Graeme Swann’s first over.
By now, even the most pessimistic of England fans was scenting victory. And that mood became even brighter when Nathan Hauritz lasted just five balls before falling to the irrepressible Flintoff, who also dismissed Peter Siddle.
Swann wrapped it all up, flattening Johnson’s middle pole as the left-hander charged him.
As well as being the first Ashes win for England at the home of cricket since 1934, it was also only their second since 1896.
They now move onto the third Test at Edgbaston starting on 30 July with all the initiative, while Australia will surely be forced into changes – with their seam-bowling department sure to come under the microscope.
There was a spectacular, expectant atmosphere at the start. Unusually, all tickets had been pre-sold for the final day of the match, and with the members also turning out in force, only some of the corporate areas looked a little thin.
England started with a ball that was six overs old, and their overnight nerves were settled when Flintoff tested Haddin outside the off-stump and Collingwood held a low, but indisputably clean catch.
Flintoff continued to pose a threat with almost every delivery he bowled. Clarke did not look like a batsman with a century to his name, and by the time Johnson had reached four he had already enjoyed two lucky escapes.
First, he nicked towards slip, the catch not quite carrying, and then an excellent lbw appeal had to be stifled by Rudi Koertzen’s call of no-ball.
James Anderson was not quite the same sort of threat, and after three overs was replaced by Stuart Broad. Johnson edged, but again the ball bounced just before reaching the slip cordon. The resulting single brought Clarke back on strike, and he hit a beautiful off-drive for four.
Anderson kept changing his bowlers at the Nursery End, and after three overs of Broad opted for the spin of Swann.
It proved an inspired move. The off-spinner has developed quite a knack for taking wickets in the first over of a spell, and Clarke – who crucially had been kept quiet by the accurate seamers – felt the need to impose himself.
He skipped down the wicket, yorked himself, and the ball turned to clip off-stump. Soon afterwards, Hauritz compliantly chose to leave a Flintoff delivery that bowled him on the angle before Johnson got lucky again, Swann dropping a sharp caught-and-bowled chance.
Australia were not about to give England any last-minute heartache, however. Flintoff beat the number 10 Siddle for pace, scuttling one into his stumps, leaving Johnson and last man Ben Hilfenhaus needing 134 for the win.
That was never on the cards, and with lunch still 20 minutes away Swann supplied the coup de grace.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Clarke and Haddin star as Australia stay alive in Ashes
Australia, chasing a world record 522 to win, were 313 for five at the close of the fourth day of the second Ashes Test at Lords in London, still needing a further 446 runs for an unlikely victory.
Australia produced a stunning counter-attack to derail England’s bid for victory in the second Ashes Test.
Australia vice-captain [...]
Swann confident of Lord’s victory

Graeme Swann insists England are still favourites to win the second Test against Australia, despite a fine stand between Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin.
The duo guided the tourists to 313-5, 209 runs adrift of the 522 victory target after a superb unbeaten 185-run fifth-wicket partnership at Lord’s.
But Swann said: "They will have to break a world record to beat us.
"We still have a new ball with Andrew Flintoff roaring in at 90mph and James Anderson swinging it at the other end."
After declaring without adding to their overnight total of 311-6, England – who have not beaten Australia in a Test at Lord’s since 1934 – reduced the tourists to 128-5, with Marcus North the final wicket to fall as he misjudged a Swann arm ball.
But vice-captain Clarke found excellent support from Haddin to record his 11th Test century, ending the day 125 not out, with the wicketkeeper unbeaten on 80.
Although no team has ever scored more than 500 chasing a fourth-innings target in Test cricket, Australia coach Tim Nielsen believes his team can create history.
"I think the only reason no team has chased 521 before is because the game usually does not move as fast as this game has," he told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"As far as we were concerned it was absolutely, no question, a catch"
Graeme Swann on Phillip Hughes’ dismissal
"At some stage in the future a team will chase down 500 – I hope it’s us on Monday."
However, Swann believes England’s seamers can utilise the overhead conditions to their advantage as they seek the all-important early breakthrough.
"Our bowlers are going to come charging in and do what has happened with the new ball on most days," said Swann, who finished with figures of 2-62.
"Wickets tend to fall in groups, so if we get one then two will be close behind. It wouldn’t be an Ashes Test if it wasn’t nail-bitingly close."
Three of England’s wickets were tinged with controversy after television replays questioned the legitimacy of the dismissals.
Simon Katich appeared to have been caught off a no-ball from Flintoff, while Andrew Strauss looked to have taken a catch on the bounce at first slip to remove Phillip Hughes.
But Swann defended his captain’s right to claim the catch.
"Straussy said he caught it and I was stood at third slip about two metres away and I saw it go straight in," he said.
"As far as we were concerned it was absolutely, no question, a catch.
"These days the word of the fielder doesn’t stand for much. It’s acceptable if the batsman stands his ground, but the umpire (Billy Doctrove) had a clear sight at square leg and gave it out."
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Swann was also involved in the third controversial wicket when Mike Hussey was caught at slip by Paul Collingwood, although replays suggested there was no contact with the bat when the ball spun sharply in the footmarks.
"It was the sound, deviation and that fact it went to slip – and the sheer excitement of getting one past the bat after Cardiff," said the 30-year-old.
"If it didn’t hit his edge then unlikely to Huss, who is a good mate of mine, I’m sure he didn’t deserve that. But as far as we were concerned it was a legitimate catch."
Nielsen paid tribute to Clarke, whose innings featured 13 boundaries from 198 deliveries.
"Michael talks regularly about if Punter misses out, then he’s the one that has to stand up and lead the batting side of things," he added.
"That’s his 11th Test match hundred, so he’s up into double figures and he was supported very well by Brad.
"He hasn’t played a huge amount of Test cricket but he’s a good thinker of the game and he showed that by playing a nice, positive support role.
"The big challenge will be tomorrow morning to set us up again and if we get started, we have still got a good chance of winning this game."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Clarke and Haddin hold up England
Second Ashes Test, Lord’s (day four, close):
England 425 & 311-6 dec v Australia 215 & 313-5
Match scorecard

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Lord’s
A superb marathon stand between Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin kept England frustrated as the home side chased victory in the second Ashes Test.
Andrew Strauss’ men seemed poised to go 1-0 up against Australia with a day to spare when Marcus North was bowled by Graeme Swann in the first hour of the afternoon session on Sunday.
At that stage, England needed just five further wickets to win. But Clarke (125 not out) batted for four and a quarter hours and Haddin (80 not out) for more than three.
And when the last 11 overs were lost to bad light, Australia were 313-5, needing another 209 to pull off what would be an extraordinary victory.
Following a short, heavy shower just before the scheduled start, play was delayed by 15 minutes. Strauss declared England’s innings on their overnight 311-6 which left an astronomic target of 522 for Australia to chase down.
Two debatable wickets for Andrew Flintoff in the first 10 overs left Australia in dreadful shape and England confidently scenting further success.
First, Simon Katich felt for a ball he might have ignored outside off stump and edged to Kevin Pietersen, one of two gullys posted. But replays later showed that Flintoff had marginally overstepped the crease – so umpire Rudi Koertzen should have called no-ball.
Phillip Hughes was uncharacteristically dropped by Flintoff at second slip off the immaculate James Anderson, but he failed to make England pay.

Flintoff, in the middle of a furious spell of 2-9 in seven overs, pitched another ball in the perfect area for testing a left-hander’s defences, and the edge travelled low to Strauss at first slip.
Strauss claimed the catch, Hughes lingered at the crease and was told by Ponting to stay where he was. Now, standing umpire Koertzen asked his counterpart at square-leg, Billy Doctrove, whether the edge had carried – and the West Indian said yes it had.
In the circumstances, Koertzen could no longer refer the appeal to the third umpire, though if he had done Jeremy Lloyds would have seen pictures that were inconclusive as to whether the catch was a fair one or not. In such an event, Hughes would have probably been reprieved.
From 34-2, Ponting and Michael Hussey did their best to weather the storm, though neither man ever looked particularly secure. Even when the support seamers, Graham Onions and Stuart Broad, came on, the batsmen were frequently beaten or hit on the pads.
Lunch came with Australia 76-2 from 22 overs, and Ponting departed early in a cold, dank afternoon session. Trying to thump Broad off the back foot through the covers he succeeded only in chopping onto his stumps.
Broad celebrated maniacally, the Lord’s crowd – though slightly depleted by those on late lunches – simultaneously roared its approval and despite the leaden, ominous skies the odds seemed to favour an England win with a day to spare.
That impression only intensified when Hussey and Marcus North both fell to Swann in the space of six overs, though Hussey did not appear to nick the ball that was sharply taken by Paul Collingwood at slip.
North was comprehensively bowled through the gate. Nevertheless, Australia would have been entitled to feel hard done by given that three of their first four dismissals were shrouded in controversy.
The rest of the day belonged entirely to the tourists.
Clarke, who had come in at the fall of Ponting’s wicket, was the only Australian batsman who played with a degree of comfort from the start. Though he was about two inches away from being bowled by Broad’s first ball, he subsequently raced along with some fine drives through the off side.
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Flintoff produced another aggressive spell from the Pavilion End and was unlucky not to remove Haddin in an over in which the Aussie wicketkeeper almost gloved to Matt Prior and then edged through the vacant third slip area.
Clarke’s 58-ball half century finally gave the Australian fans something to cheer about and suddenly England were searching for wickets when before they had fallen into their lap.
By tea, the score was 178-5 and as the final session started both batsmen made patient, serene progress. As England counted down the overs to the second new ball, Swann and Collingwood – neither looking likely to create a breakthrough – were the men entrusted with the bowling.
One ball after Haddin had cut Swann for a single to reach 50, Clarke – whose second 50 had occupied 101 deliveries – flicked the spinner through midwicket for his 11th Test ton.
Finally, as the floodlights flickered into action, the second new ball was taken just before 1800 BST with 18 overs still left in the day.
But there was no immediate reward for Anderson and Flintoff, though a couple of edges off each batsman flew tantalisingly just out of reach.
Monday, which will begin with the new ball only six overs old, will be a tense occasion for both teams. The draw looks out of the equation, but although the odds still favour an England win, nothing will be taken for granted.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
England open up huge Lord’s lead
Second Ashes Test, Lord’s (day three, stumps): England 425 and 311-6 v Australia 215
Match scorecard

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Lord’s
England put themselves in a powerful position after three days of the second Ashes Test at Lord’s as they reached 311-6 in their second innings to lead Australia by 521 runs.
After bowling out Australia for 215, they held a 210-run lead but opted against enforcing the follow-on – and put the tourists’ bowlers to task again.
Following a sterile session between lunch and tea when England added just 73, Matt Prior’s sparkling 61 off just 42 balls turned a turgid innings into a run spree.
The Aussies will need to shatter the previous record for a fourth-innings chase when England declare their innings – an event that will surely come early on day four as the hosts seek to secure the lead in the five-match series.
Most of the damage had been done on Friday, when Australia crashed to 156-8 in reply to England’s 425.
The excellent James Anderson was unable to add to his four-wicket haul, leaving Graham Onions to mop up the tail, which he did after Peter Siddle (35) and Nathan Hauritz (24) had added 44 for the ninth wicket, all but four of those runs coming on Saturday.
Stuart Broad disappointed from the Pavilion End, but two edges fell frustratingly a metre short of Paul Collingwood at third slip when Anderson was bowling.
England’s irritation ended as soon as he was replaced by Onions – a third edge heading in Collingwood’s direction was smoothly held to end Hauritz’s stay at the crease.
Nevertheless, the follow-on was a tantalising 30 runs away when Siddle was joined by last man Ben Hilfenhaus, and three more Siddle boundaries off Broad brought the deficit down even more.
But it was Onions’ morning. He intelligently probed away in the channel outside off-stump and finally, in his third over, picked up the last wicket when Siddle sliced a drive to Andrew Strauss at first slip.
Strauss now had to decide whether to let his bowlers loose again, or strap on his pads. He made the more cautious choice of batting and that immediately took the tension out of the game.

In some of the most placid conditions of the match, Strauss and Alastair Cook laid into Mitchell Johnson, whose three dreadful overs were hit for 17 – and we did not see him again until the final hour of the second session.
Hilfenhaus was more accurate, but Cook had the confidence to go after him with some bold off-drives and at lunch England had rattled up 57-0 to lead by 267.
Hauritz bowled a terrific spell after lunch, however, to remove both of England’s openers for 32. Cook, playing around his front pad, was lbw for the third time in succession and Strauss nicked a lovely off-break to slip.
Reckoning his spinner would be less effective against the right-handers, Ponting now teamed Siddle and Hilfenhaus together and could have had England four down for under 100.
But when Kevin Pietersen, on 20, went walkabout following a big lbw appeal off Hilfenhaus, Ponting himself – from second slip – missed a golden opportunity to run him out, rushing his shy at the stumps.
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Then Ravi Bopara, having made just nine, saw Ponting drop his edge off Siddle – the easiest slip catch imaginable – and the crowd guffawed at the error in a way that Lord’s crowds of previous vintages would never have done.
But as Bopara and Ponting searched for form, the run-scoring dried up, and there was a fallow period of 11 overs without a boundary before Pietersen square-cut the tiring Hilfenhaus to the cover-point fence.
Bopara now played a horrid pull off Johnson, in the last over before tea, that almost carried to Hauritz at mid-on. The fielder claimed a catch, but it did not look a clean one to the naked eye and the decision was referred before the appeal was rightly rejected.
Ponting and Pietersen had a friendly discussion about the incident and soon afterwards the players took tea, with England on 130-2, leading by a very healthy 340, despite some very scratchy form shown by the two batsmen at the crease.
Early in the long final session, Bopara cover-drove Hauritz sweetly for four, but in the spinner’s next over he was surprised by a slower, straighter delivery and pushed the ball meekly to short-leg. He had made 27 from 93 balls, with just 13 scoring shots.
Pietersen now tried to impose himself, driving Siddle for two boundaries, but his painful 101-ball innings was ended on 44 when an inside-edge off the same bowler was caught by wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.

England’s number four had looked badly hampered by his Achilles problem, and a number of runs went begging because he was struggling to run between wickets.
But any danger that Australia might end up with an attractive target vanished when Collingwood and Prior added 86 from 73 balls.
Hitting plenty of boundaries, they also scampered twos, threes and an all-run four, the scoring rate rapidly improved.
Prior was particularly impressive, with some booming drives off the seamers and some sweeps off Hauritz that were timed and placed to perfection.
He fairly raced to his half-century and was unlucky to get out when he did, a victim of a brilliant bit of fielding from Marcus North, who ran him out with a direct hit from the deep.
Flintoff sauntered out to play his final Test innings at Lord’s and was given a rapturous welcome. With no pressure on him at all, he smacked the bowling about merrily, adding 51 off 48 balls with Collingwood until Siddle took Australia’s sixth wicket.
But just moments after Collingwood had edged to Haddin, the rain came down and the final 10.4 overs of the day went unbowled, with Flintoff unbeaten on 30.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
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Australia charge thwarted by rain
First Ashes Test, Cardiff (day four, stumps):
England 435 & 20-2 v Australia 674-6d
Coverage: Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live sports extra, BBC Radio 4 Long Wave, Red Button and BBC Sport website, plus live text commentary on BBC Sport website and mobiles. Live on Sky Sports
Match scorecard

By David Ornstein
England face a fight to save the first Ashes Test after being dominated by Australia on day four in Cardiff.
Marcus North (125no) and Brad Haddin (121) both crafted superb centuries as the tourists posted 674-6 declared – a first-innings lead of 239 runs.
England’s situation then worsened when Mitchell Johnson trapped Alastair Cook lbw for six and Ravi Bopara fell in the same manner to Ben Hilfenhaus for one.
The hosts were 20-2 – 219 runs behind – when rain forced an early finish.
Australia should be delighted with their position going into day five and will be confident of taking a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.
While England would have been relieved to see the heavens open just as tea was taken, they still face an uphill battle to avoid defeat as the forecast for the final day is fair.
Captain Andrew Strauss (6no) and his predecessor Kevin Pietersen (3no) will return to the crease on Sunday morning hoping to build a solid partnership and help their side to safety.
The weather was always expected to play a part but, despite forecasts of morning showers, day four got under way as scheduled at 1100 BST.
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Conditions were fairly muggy with a heavy covering of cloud overhead, which should have enabled England to get the ball swinging as they went in search of early wickets.
But there seemed a general lack of urgency about the hosts and Australia, who resumed on 479-5, were able to ease through the opening exchanges.
Haddin, four not out overnight, would have expected an uncomfortable start, but he received nothing of the sort – clipping, hooking and driving Stuart Broad for three effortless boundaries to calm any nerves.
At the other end, North was allowed to get his eye in all too comfortably and, from an overnight score of 54, the left-hander pushed on towards three figures with little trouble.
Andrew Flintoff, England’s principal pace threat, was not introduced until the 11th over of the morning session but by that point the batsmen had settled into a nice rhythm.
The all-spin combination of Monty Panesar and Graeme Swann did cause problems – both beat the outside edge and Swann had a decent lbw shout against Haddin correctly rejected by Aleem Dar – yet they could not dissuade Strauss from taking the third new ball three overs before lunch.
Flintoff and Anderson were restored to the attack as England went in desperate search of a pre-interval breakthrough, but the move backfired as North and Haddin punished some wayward new-ball bowling.

North guided Anderson behind point to record a richly-deserved century – the Western Australia captain has now scored tons on both his Test and Ashes debuts – and Haddin took a quick single off Flintoff to pass 50.
Australia reached lunch on 577-5, a lead of 142 runs, and after the re-start they put England to the sword.
Haddin was their destroyer-in-chief and signalled his intent by hitting cutting, edging and flicking three successive Anderson deliveries to the rope.
The 31-year-old New South Wales wicketkeeper was treating England with utter disdain and closed in on his second Test century with towering sixes off Swann and Panesar.
When he flicked Paul Collingwood to fine leg to reach 100 it was the first time Australia had hit four tons in an Ashes innings.
Strauss must have been praying for rain but if anything the skies began to clear and Haddin’s assault continued as Collingwood was dispatched for a couple more leg side fours and another six.
He eventually holed out to Ravi Bopara at deep midwicket – ending a 200-run partnership with fellow Ashes debutant North – but the damage had already been done and Australia captain Ricky Ponting called his men in.
It was Australia’s highest total against England since being dismissed for 701 in 1934 at The Oval and their fourth highest ever in the Ashes.
Just 25 minutes remained before tea and it was critical for England to reach the break unscathed, but they failed miserably.
As the light deteriorated and the floodlights came on for the second time in the match, Cook played across a full-length delivery from Johnson and Bopara was trapped attempting to flick Hilfenhaus to leg.
Luckily for England the rain then arrived, but for a third day running the spoils belonged to Australia.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
England’s struggle interrupted by rain
England 435 and 20-2, Australia 674-6dec
The gloom that had descended over Sophia Gardens by tea-time can only have been matched by that in the England dressing room. Faced with a monumental total, the like of which the Australians have never before come close to matching as an entrée into an Ashes series, they required 239 runs to avoid an innings defeat.
The early exit of Alastair Cook, palpably leg before wicket to Mitchell Johnson in the fifth over of the innings as he played around his front pad, was not the start they were looking for. Next to go, eight balls later in the following over, was Ravi Bopara, also lbw, to Ben Hilfenhaus as he tried to work a straight ball crookedly to midwicket. If it was an inept shot – a touch too flashy for comfort: had he not watched Ricky Ponting for hour after hour? – then it was an even more inept decision by Billy Doctrove, the ball destined to pass a distance over the top of the stumps. At 20 for two, it looks as if even rain, which arrived on cue, cannot save England.
The Australian innings was relentless. No wicket had fallen during the morning session, nor seemed likely to, and during the afternoon Marcus North and Brad Haddin were able to continue their dissection of the England bowling, the stately progress of earlier replaced by a late romp as Ponting sensed the impending bad weather and the chance to make a statement before it arrived.
Haddin in particular came out of his self-imposed shell, using just 48 deliveries to go from his half century to his second Test hundred. By the time he was well caught by Bopara, in the furthestmost corner of the ground as he hoiked Paul Collingwood away, he had made 121, with 11 fours and three sixes. Ponting promptly called off the humiliation, leaving North unbeaten on 125. The sixth wicket had produced exactly 200, Australia’s 674 for five the highest total made by them against England in the last 75 years, and their fourth highest ever against them.
Once, in 1955, five Australian batsmen made hundreds in a single innings against West Indies, but never had there been four by them until Haddin clipped the single that took him to three figures. No one previously had made four in an innings against England. They really do know how to hit so that it hurts.
Click here for a full Test scorecard from the Swalec Stadium, here for Mike Selvey’s morning report and here for his day three audio report. For other news, features, comment, video, audio, Hawk-Eye and more, visit our dedicated Ashes site



