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Posts Tagged ‘innings’

Tourists bowled over by £215 flights

British Airways and Qantas offer dramatically reduced tickets based on Ashes first innings scores

Capitalising on an upsurge in national happiness following England’s victory over Australia this afternoon, British Airways and Qantas have teamed up to offer fares to Australia based on the first innings scores of the second npower test, with the number of seats determined by the amount of runs scored by the opposing team.

As Australia were all out for 215 in their first innings reply to England’s 425 on Saturday, both British Airways and Qantas will be giving away 425 flights to Sydney for £215 – an amazing reduction on a typical fare of £730. The offer is available tomorrow (21 July, 2009) on British Airways flights from 10am, and Qantas flights from 8am.

In the previous Ashes in 2005, British Airways offered 367 seats at £373 when Australia scored 367 runs for 373 against England in the final test. Flights were sold out within 30 minutes.

For terms and conditions please check each airline’s website from 21 July. For further information visit ba.com and qantas.com . Offer is subject to availability.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


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

Matt Prior

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.

Ricky Ponting fumbles a dropped catch off Peter Siddle

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.

606: DEBATE

"I think he’ll set them maybe 600 – and that’s at least 50 more than we need in my book"

Tastytunes

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.

Andrew Flintoff

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.

Defiant England cling on for draw

First Ashes Test, Cardiff (day five:
England 435 & 252-9 drew with Australia 674-6 declared
Match scorecard

Paul Collingwood

By Oliver Brett

England’s last-wicket pair James Anderson and Monty Panesar defied Australia for 40 minutes to clinch a draw in the first Ashes Test.

Amid scenes of high tension in Cardiff, and with every dot ball roared by a capacity crowd, England somehow kept Australia’s spinners at bay.

Paul Collingwood hit a valiant 74 after England, 20-2 overnight, had lost three further wickets inside 90 minutes.

Australia seemed certain winners then, but somehow England clung on.

Collingwood’s innings lasted 245 balls, five and three quarter hours in all. It was an innings of grisly determination, which put the efforts of other players in the top order sharply into perspective.

But with 50 minutes to go in the match, and England still a tantalising six runs away from making Australia bat again, the Durham man played probably his first slightly risky shot.

Attempting to steer Siddle wide of point he instead hit it high to backward point, where Michael Hussey parried a catch above his head, before taking it – agonisingly – at the second opportunity.

It seemed now, with Panesar coming out to join Anderson, that England would lose in heart-breaking fashion. But the last man refused to be an easy target, and when Anderson squirted Siddle down to third man for four, England had a precious lead.

Significantly, that meant England did not have to bat until the 1850 BST cut-off. They just had to get past 1840, which meant facing around three overs fewer.

Australia captain Ricky Ponting, who seemed to underbowl his hugely impressive swing bowler Ben Hilfenhaus, gave the final few overs to the two off-spinners Nathan Hauritz and Marcus North.

But Hauritz, though he had bowled brilliantly earlier in the day, taking three significant wickets, was by now tired and North was not a danger to two vastly improved tail-enders.

When the clock ticked past 1840 BST, it was clear that Hauritz was bowling the last over. Anderson survived his 53rd delivery – Panesar had hung around for 35 – and the ground roared as one to salute a famous result.

More to follow.</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

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds