RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Ravi Bopara’

Pietersen scores his first IPL half-century

Kevin Pietersen’s knock (66 off 44 balls) against Kings XI Punjab was his first half-century in Indian Premier League (IPL).
Pietersen, who was playing his first match for Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) this season, was adjdged the Man of the Match after RCB beat Kings Xi Punjab by six wickets Friday night.
Other statistical highlights of the [...]

Pietersen powers Royal Challengers to a victory over Kings XI

Blistering unbeaten half-century from Kevin Pietersen helped Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) beat Kings XI Punjab by six wickets in the Indian Premier League (IPL) at floodlit Punjab Cricket Association (PCA) stadium here Friday.
Man of the Match Pietersen remained unbeaten on 66 and Virat Kohli made a breezy 42 as Royal Challengers Bangalore made 184 for [...]

Jhappis, prasad, slaps for Kings XI Punjab

“They (Kings XI Punjab) have had enough jhappis and prasad from Preity Zinta. It is high time they got some slaps from her.” The SMS joke had started doing the rounds in Punjab circles even before the Mohali team in the Indian Premier League (IPL) crashed to its sixth loss in seven outings in the [...]

Scoreboard: Mumbai Indians vs. Kings XI Punjab, IPL

The following is the scoreboard of the Indian Premier League (IPL) match between Kings XI Punjab and Mumbai Indians at the Brabourne Stadium here Tuesday.
Kings XI Punjab:
Ravi Bopara lbw Khan 1 (4 balls)
Shaun Marsh b Malinga 57 (47 balls, 4×6, 6×1)
Manvinder Bisla c Khan b Malinga 11 (10 balls, 4×1)
Mahela Jayawardene run out (Malinga/Rayudu) 20 [...]

Delhi Daredevils beat Kings XI Punjab by five wickets in IPL thriller

Skipper Gautam Gambhir led the batting charge with a brilliant 54-ball 72 as Delhi Daredevils opened their Indian Premier League campaign on a winning note snatching a five-wicket victory over Kings XI Punjab in a thrilling encounter in Mohali on Saturday.
Delhi first restricted the Punjab side to 142 for nine, thanks to nice bowling by [...]

Horror show by batsmen behind England rout in NatWest series: Anderson

England fast bowler James Anderson has voiced his frustration and anger at the England batsmen for their disastrous NatWest series performance against Australia.
In the absence of experienced batsman like Andrew Flintoff and Kevin Peitersen, the inexperienced England team was not able to cope with the formidable Australians, which resulted in a 6-1 series defeat.
“I don”t [...]

England gamble on uncapped Trott

Fifth Ashes Test, The Oval: England v Australia
Dates: Thursday, 20 August to Monday, 24 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.


Jonathan Trott

England are set to take a major gamble in the crucial fifth Ashes Test by replacing Ravi Bopara with the uncapped Jonathan Trott, BBC Sport understands.

Ian Bell, whose position in the side has also been under threat, is poised to keep his place and move up the batting order to number three.

Changes had been expected after the humiliating defeat in the fourth Test.

Mark Ramprakash and Rob Key had been touted for call-ups, but appear to have been overlooked in favour of Trott.

England, who must win the fifth Test against Australia at The Oval to regain the Ashes, are set to officially announce their squad at 0930 BST on Sunday after a week of intense debate about the make-up of the squad.

The 28-year-old Trott was included in the 14-man squad for the fourth Test at Headingley, but was released to play for Warwickshire.

With 1013 runs in the County championship this season at an average of 92.09, Trott is a player in a rich vein of form – but the decision to throw him in for a Test debut in the high-pressure environment of a decisive Ashes Test is a big gamble for the selectors.

The South Africa-born batsman served a timely reminder of his ability with a century for Warwickshire against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge, while Bell made 126 to help his case to retain his place.

Trott will get a dress rehearsal of sorts when he plays for the second-string England Lions side against Australia in a two-day match at Canterbury starting on Saturday.

Bopara’s place has been in severe jeopardy, with just 105 runs from his seven innings in the series.

"Every batsman has been through a run of low scores and he hasn’t managed to really get in and show what he is made of in this series"

England coach Andy Flower on Bopara

He showed his fighting spirit and ability with an unbeaten 52 for Essex against Middlesex on Friday, but it appears to have been insufficient evidence for the England selectors.

Nevertheless, England coach Andy Flower has backed the 24-year-old – who had been in fine form against the West Indies earlier in the year – to come through his difficult spell.

"Every batsman has been through a run of low scores and he hasn’t managed to really get in and show what he is made of in this series," said Flower.

"It’s a tough situation for him but he is a pretty calm bloke, so he’s keeping it in perspective."

Trott’s elevation to the side has come at the expense of the 39-year-old Ramprakash and Key.

Ramprakash made the last of his 52 Test appearances in 2002, but had indicated he would be available should the selectors require his services.

The Surrey batsman has once again been in prolific form for his county, notching his 108th first-class career century against Derbyshire last week.

His Test statistics, however, make more sober reading, scoring 2350 runs at 27.32, with just two centuries from 92 innings.

606: DEBATE

"It’s true Trott will really be going in at the deep end but surely he HAS to be an improvement on Bopara for the Oval"

goldenduck2

Meanwhile, Kent captain Key, who played the last of his 15 Tests for England in January 2005, has also failed to convince the selectors.

Marcus Trescothic had also been mentioned as a possible replacement, but the former England opener ruled himself out of contention earlier in the week.

Trescothick retired from five-day cricket in March 2008 because of a stress-related illness.

The fascination with the state of inspirational all-rounder Andrew Flintoff’s knee has been overshadowed by the debate over changes to the batting line-up in the build-up to the Ashes decider.

But Flintoff, who missed the Headingley defeat, should be fit for his final ever Test.

The 31-year-old was examined by specialist Andy Williams on Monday but while the prognosis was encouraging, England said Flintoff will undergo "further rest and intensive treatment" in order to regain his place in the starting XI on Thursday.

Away from the top order, England face further quandaries over the composition of their bowling attack on a pitch which has yet to see a victory in a Championship match all season.

The Oval is traditionally one of the fastest pitches in England, favouring genuine quick bowlers and spinners, rather than swingers.

With Flintoff expected to return, the selectors must decide whether to drop Steve Harmison, who took two wickets on his recall at Headingley, Graham Onions, James Anderson or Stuart Broad.

Anderson failed to take a wicket in the fourth Test, while Broad registered career-best figures of 6-91.

However, Surrey manager Chris Adams suggested the ball will turn at The Oval and told Phil Tufnell’s Cricket Show that England should select two spinners from Graeme Swann, Monty Panesar or Adil Rashid.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ramprakash backed for Test recall

Mark Ramprakash

Surrey batsman Mark Ramprakash is being backed for a remarkable England recall for the decisive fifth Ashes Test – seven years since he was last capped.

Australia crushed England to level the series going into the final match at The Oval, Ramprakash’s home ground.

He turns 40 in September and has not played for England since 2002 but has been in prolific form for his county.

"If I was an England selector picking my best side, he’d be in it," said Surrey cricket manager Chris Adams.

"He is playing the best cricket of his life," Adams, who briefly played for England, both at Test and one-day international cricket, told BBC Radio 5 live.

"He’s a fine player, whether it’s the right time to bring him back into a Test match is a different story"

Australia captain Ricky Ponting

"He has done so for three years. I believe strongly he has been the best batsman available for England for those three years.

"I know Kevin Pietersen would have something to say about that but from what I’ve seen from Mark this year he is an exceptional batsman, a batsman at the top of his game."

Adams echoed comments made by former England captain Alec Stewart, also a Surrey stalwart, who suggested a one-off return for Ramprakash might be the best option for a side enduring a middle-order crisis.

Only one England batsman, skipper Andrew Strauss, has scored a century in the series so far, compared to Australia’s return of seven.

Ravi Bopara, Paul Collingwood and Ian Bell, who replaced the injured Pietersen, have all disappointed.

606: DEBATE

"The Oval is Ramprakash’s home ground, as usual he is scoring countless runs, and let’s be honest, its not like he can do much worse than the current team"

The Ashes England

Between them, Bopara, Collingwood and Bell contributed a total of just 16 runs during the fourth Test at Headingley and England coach Andy Flower has suggested the batting line-up might be altered following his side’s innings and 80-run defeat.

Earlier in the summer Essex batsman Bopara cemented his place at number three with three consecutive centuries against West Indies but the 24-year-old has struggled against Australia, scoring 105 runs in seven innings at an average of 15.

England named Warwickshire batsman Jonathan Trott in their squad for the fourth Test and he is another being touted to replace Bopara for The Oval Test, which starts on 20 August.

Kent captain Rob Key’s name is also being bandied around, with former England batsman Geoffrey Boycott and BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew backing his inclusion.

Meanwhile England are again waiting on the fitness of all-rounder Andrew Flintoff.

He was seeing knee specialist Andy Williams on Monday with England captain Andrew Strauss keen for an early decision.

England waited until the morning of the fourth Test to rule Flintoff out.

The Lancastrian had said he was fit enough to play but was overruled by Strauss and Flower.

Strauss said: "Hopefully we’ll know two or three days out from the Test match whether he’s fit enough to play.

"He’s still desperate to play in that final Test but he realises he’s got to be fit enough."

TOM FORDYCE BLOG

"As everyone remembered that it’s actually 1-1 rather than 0-4, Andrew Strauss took on the role of Corporal Jones: "Don’t panic, Mr Mainwaring!""

But it is Ramprakash, who won the BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing show in 2006, whose name is causing the biggest stir.

The right-hander has played 52 Tests, scoring 2350 runs at an average of 27.32 with 12 half-centuries and two tons.

In 12 Tests against Australia he has notched 933 runs at an average of 42.40 with one century, coming at The Oval in 2001.

He was dropped after scores of nine and two against New Zealand in Auckland seven years ago but has since moved from Middlesex to Surrey and continued to dominate opposition bowling attacks at county level.

In 2008 he became only the 25th player to score 100 first-class centuries with a ton against Yorkshire at Headingley, and on Sunday he showed he was still going strong with 134 not out against Derbyshire.

It was the 108th first-class century of his career and moved him level with Pakistan’s Zaheer Abbas in 16th place on the all-time list.

"He’s a fine player, whether it’s the right time to bring him back into a Test match is a different story," said Australia captain Ricky Ponting.

"It’s amazing how quickly things change either the way the media sees the team or even the way the team looks upon itself."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Australia defy England to earn draw

Third Ashes Test, Edgbaston (day five):
England 376 drew with Australia 263 & 375-5
Match scorecard

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Edgbaston

Michael Clarke

England were forced to settle for a draw at the rain-hit Edgbaston Test and will move on to Headingley on Friday with a 1-0 lead.

Michael Clarke (103 not out) and Marcus North (96) came together before lunch with Australia in a precarious position, four wickets down in their second innings and only 48 runs ahead.

But after Shane Watson (53) and Michael Hussey (64) had been dismissed in the morning session, Clarke and North put on 185 for the fifth wicket in 50 overs to shut the door firmly on England’s victory bid.

The match ended with Australia, who resisted the temptation to have a crack at England’s batsmen, leading by 262 on 375-5 when the captains agreed on an early draw at 1750 BST, with 13.4 overs remaining in the day.

Clarke, with his second century of the series, again proved the biggest obstacle for England to shift – and whereas at Lord’s he was finally dismissed, here he was undefeated for 192 balls and 283 minutes, in which he hit 14 fours.

He had two massive bits of luck in the 90s as he tortuously moved towards his century, Stuart Broad shaving his stumps with a ball that failed to dislodge the bails and Ravi Bopara having him caught at gully on 96, but off a no-ball.

With Australia 88-2 overnight, still trailing by 25 runs, the fans came expectantly in their thousands – and made it the first ever sell-out for the final day of a Test match in Birmingham.

After most of Thursday and the whole of Saturday had been lost to rain, there were no interruptions on Monday – but England’s bowlers were not at their very best.

Andrew Flintoff

Australia batted well, there was little swing on offer, and the wicket played pretty flat.

Watson was 34 and Hussey 18 when play started, and Andrew Flintoff bowled brilliantly early on at the left-handed Hussey, without any luck.

The deficit had been wiped out when Flintoff beat Hussey’s outside edge for the fifth time in the day, and when the left-hander cut the disappointing Graeme Swann for four Australia nudged into the lead.

Flintoff had mostly been bowling at Hussey all morning, but now had Watson in his sights, and struck the right-hander flush on an unprotected forearm. Bravely, Watson played out the rest of a testing over impeccably.

On the hour mark, the all-rounder moved to his second half-century of the match by flogging a full-toss off Swann through the covers for four.

Finally James Anderson, England’s outstanding bowler of the series, was permitted to have a bowl and struck in his first over – a hint of outswing, a thin edge from Watson, and an easy catch for Matt Prior.

Hussey continued to play well, hitting a short ball from Swann through the on-side for his 10th four, taking him to his fifty.

With England seeking further inspiration, Broad was given a ball that was 50 overs old for his first bowl of the innings. He began with a half-volley driven to the extra-cover fence for four by Hussey.

But he was much better in his second over, and the first ball from round the wicket was sent down in the perfect channel outside Hussey’s off-stump and just caught the edge.

606: DEBATE

"Of course the weather had a severe effect on our chances of winning this test, but I still feel our bowling left a little to be desired"

The Eternal Optimist

At lunch Australia were 172-4, ahead by 59, and Clarke and North – batting with the sun on their backs soon after the interval – made smooth progress after the interval to give their team further daylight.

Things quickly became fairly desperate for England, and Andrew Strauss asked Bopara to come into the attack with the score 219-4.

His second ball, an indifferent short-pitched delivery, was smashed by Clarke – on 38 at that point – to Strauss at short midwicket. But the skipper floored a tough chance, and one sensed the game was slipping away.

Though Swann was starting to find some rhythm, Clarke swept him cleverly in front of square for four to move into the 40s and North was also finding his range well.

England took the second new ball, but the atmosphere became very subdued as both batsmen reached their fifties and when tea came on 293-4, with Clarke 73 and North 64, it had been clear for some time that there could be no positive result.

Furthermore, Australia led by 180, so if another day had been available England might have been under pressure.

Swann came under attack from North after the interval, with Broad bowling well at the other end. The partnership stretched past 150, with Australia now cruising beyond 300.

The fun for the batsmen really started with Bopara’s second spell, in which North struck three successive boundaries to reach 95. But he finally fell to a stunning catch in the gully by Anderson as Broad picked up a deserved second wicket.

The game would have ended earlier had not Clarke made such painful progress through the 90s, but he finally got to his century with a pull shot off Bopara and the players could concentrate on the fourth Test at Headingley.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Anderson haul puts England on top

Third Ashes Test, Edgbaston (day two):
England 116-2 v Australia 263
Match scorecard

James Anderson celebrates a wicket with Graeme Swann

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Edgbaston

Brilliant swing bowling from James Anderson and Graham Onions put England in a fine position after two days of the third Ashes Test.

Australia capitulated shockingly from an overnight 126-1, losing two wickets off the first two balls of the morning, to collapse to 203-8 at lunch and eventually 263 all out.

When bad light brought a premature end to proceedings at 1745 BST, with 19 overs left in the day, Andrew Strauss (64 not out) had guided England to 116-2, trailing by 147.

Onions triggered the Aussies’ demise, taking the first three wickets in the day to fall, and then the last, to finish with 4-58.

Anderson recovered from a poor showing on Thursday, and some wayward stuff early in his spell on day two, to take 5-13 in 38 balls either side of lunch for overall figures of 5-80.

But another key figure in proceedings was umpire Rudi Koertzen, who awarded Anderson two very debatable lbws and then denied Mitchell Johnson one against Ian Bell when the ball would have probably hit middle stump.

Bell, who hit the first six of the Ashes series by an England batsman, lived to fight another day, and will resume with Strauss on 26.

Graham Onions celebrates taking a wicket

With the memories of a disjointed bowling display on Thursday evening still in the back of the mind, Onions gave his team – and the home fans – a massive boost with the first two balls of.

Shane Watson, who had cruised to 62, just 16 runs shy of his best score in Tests in his first experience as an opener at this level, completely misjudged his shot at a ball homing in on his stumps.

Failing to get his bat down in time, he gave Aleem Dar an easy lbw decision to make.

Michael Hussey, who was bowled playing no shot to Andrew Flintoff at Lord’s, again left a delivery that only came back a fraction to brush his off-stump.

Though some of the 21,000 fans had not yet taken their seats, they rushed into position to see the hat-trick ball – and after the obligatory roar Onions sent a short ball just whistling past Michael Clarke’s gloves.

The game settled down for a while as Clarke and Ricky Ponting used their collective nous to withstand Onions’ variations on a theme of swing.

The captain picked up the runs needed to pass Allan Border and become the leading Australian run-scorer in Tests – leaving only pack leader Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara in front of him.

And when he on-drove Flintoff for four, taking the score to 159-3, Australia appeared to be entering calmer waters. But only four runs were added before Ponting, on 38, tried to pull a well-directed bouncer from Onions and edged to wicketkeeper Matt Prior.

All the action was happening in Onions’ tremendous nine-over spell from the City End – and he could have had Clarke out twice.

The right-hander was reprieved by umpire Dar, turning down a very good lbw shout on 18, and by Flintoff on 20. England’s usually flawless second slip somehow spilt an outside edge.

But it was Anderson who picked up the wicket-taking baton in devastating fashion from the Pavilion End as Australia lurched from 193-4 to 229-9 – with Koertzen providing two prominent assists.

The South African official ended Clarke’s innings on 29 (ball probably missing leg-stump) and then Johnson back for a golden duck (slightly too high, according to Hawkeye).

In between those two wickets, Marcus North chased a wide one and was well caught by a diving Prior. Anderson’s fourth wicket, and the eighth of the innings, came when Graham Manou was bowled by a pearler.

Australia took lunch in dreadful shape, but their tail-enders did pretty well after the interval – although the ball was still swinging – to add 60 runs for the final two wickets. Onions finally wrapped it up, taking a richly-deserved fourth wicket when Ben Hilfenhaus speared the Durham man to gully.

By then, Peter Siddle had edged Anderson behind, giving him his first five-wicket Ashes haul, and it should all have ended on 241 when Nathan Hauritz top-edged a pull over Ravi Bopara’s head.

England’s backward-point had to turn to take the catch over his shoulder, but it was not a difficult chance and thus a disappointing drop.

Hauritz and Hilfenhaus each made 20, a suggestion to England’s openers that batting was not necessarily as nightmarish as many of the Australians had made it look.

And when Hilfenhaus and Siddle then opened the bowling for the Aussies there was only the merest hint of swing – nothing like the lavish movement enjoyed by Onions and Anderson.

606: DEBATE

"If Bopara, Broad and Cook continue to play and fail, we will struggle to maintain our lead in this series!"

ingeniousAsh

All the same, the Aussies had an ideal start when Alastair Cook lazily drove at a ball outside off-stump he could have easily left in the second over, Manou making an instant impression with a solid wicketkeeper’s catch.

But with Strauss looking in good touch from the off, and Ravi Bopara overcoming a slightly nervy start to hit some scorching drives through the off-side, England recovered to reach tea on 56-1.

Intriguingly, Johnson was relegated behind Hauritz to fourth bowler on the Australian roster, and after tea was replaced by Hilfenhaus at the Pavilion End.

Ponting judged that particular bowling change well, Hilfenhaus putting Bopara in two minds with a teaser outside off-stumps, and the Essex man’s tentative poke deflected the ball into his stumps.

With the scoreboard reading 60-2, there was a bit of a pressure on the recalled Bell to make an impression – and he did not disappoint on his home ground.

Siddle helped him out with a couple of full tosses that were easily put away, and Bell’s confidence looked in good order as he drove Hauritz over mid-on for the landmark maximum.

Strauss reached his fifty with a back-foot punch off the tiring Hilfenhaus for four and followed up with a lovely straight drive off the same bowler.

Bell was given a major lifeline on 18 when umpire Koertzen, who had already infuriated Australian fans at Lord’s with some of his decision-making, denied Johnson’s concerted lbw appeal.

A few balls later, Bell hit a rasping cover-drive to the boundary to exasperate a much-improved Johnson further. Australia might be glad that Koertzen is not officiating at Headingley or The Oval. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ashes: Border says Clark should replace Johnson

Former Australian cricket captain Allan Border says that left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Johnson’’s form has become so poor that he needs to step away from Test cricket for at least a week to rebuild his game.
Border wants experienced seamer Stuart Clark to replace Johnson as the only change in the team for the third Test, [...]

Injured KP’’s absence won”t put pressure on me: Bopara

England’s one drop batsman Ravi Bopara says that Kevin Pietersen’’s injury will not put him under extra pressure against Australia when the third Test gets underway from Thursday.
Bopara keeps the No 3 slot despite a top score of just 35 in the series so far.
“I”ve not felt bad once at the crease during this series. [...]

Cricket Australia chief praises Ponting for role in tense Lord’s Test

Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland has praised Australian captain Ricky Ponting for his handling of several tense situations during the Lord’’s Test.
Sutherland emphasized that he was not questioning whether England captain Andrew Strauss had caught the ball cleanly off Phillip Hughes, but wanted to know why it was not referred to the third umpire as [...]

England v Australia – as it happened

England beat Australia at Lord’s for the first time since 1934, and are now 1-0 up in the Ashes

Andy will be here to start the coverage from 10.30am. Try not to chew off all your fingernails in between now and then.

In fact, to stop you doing that, why don’t you follow some links instead. Paul Hayward thinks the greatest escape since Steve McQueen tried to clear the barbed wire on his TR6 is on. McQueen didn’t make it, of course.

Vic Marks s says likewise and actually thinks Strauss has, for once, been too aggressive in his captaincy.

Actually no one seems to be writing anything that’s designed to make us less nervous, do they? 209 runs? Five wickets? Surely not … anyway, we’ll find out soon enough.

Morning everyone. Don’t panic. Don’t panic. Don’t panic. Yet.

Oh what’s the use of telling you that. You’re going to panic anyway aren’t you? Just look at the state of Roland Langebein: “Everything in my life is going well right now – just secured a nice pay rise, and therefore been able to buy my first flat, I enjoy my work and I’m in a happy relationship. And yet I woke up this morning feeling nervous and stressed and all because of the outcome of today’s play. That can’t be right can it? I mean human nature shouldn’t work like that should it?”

Sorry, a payrise? How on earth did you wangle that?

209 runs is just plenty. England need a wicket or two inside the first 15 overs or so. The new ball is only six overs old, and the closer they get to this improbable finish, the sweatier Australia are going to get. Playing well when you’ve no chance of winning is one thing, doing it when you’ve a chance of actually pulling it off is something else altogether. It’s all about the pressure, people, and which side deals with it better.

Clarke and Haddin aside the man to fear is Mitchell Johnson. Though he’s looked utterly shot through in his performances so far, England will still need to remove him quickly when he does come in. The man licks the ball a long way, as South Africa will tell you.

“What’s the ticket situation Andy?” asks Tim Goldby. I’d suggest Tim, that if you’re asking that question now, 37 minutes before the start of play, you’ve not got a chance of getting in. Given that these tickets have been on sale – and sold out – for many months now.

“Michael can you win it?” asks Mike Atherton of Michael Clarke. “I hope so” he replies, “we’ll see”. Yesterday, interestingly, there was much less doubt in his mind.

Here’s Simon Alpren: “If Roland ‘pay rise, new flat, brilliant life’ Longbein is feeling nervous, just think what the rest of us are like. Without the pleasure of an England win to temper my mood, I’ll be back on the sauce before noon.” You mean you’re not on it already? It is 10.30 already…

You can keep your “if England lose this then…” chat. Sorry. Put it on ice and bring it back at lunchtime.

A public service announcement from Tom Carver: “If Simon is avoiding the sauce for financial reasons he should get himself down to Iceland – my local one has 3-litre boxes of cider for £2.25. Perfect for a morning’s cricket watching.” Mmm.

Word from the ground comes courtesy of Gavin Hutchinson “Just sitting at Lord’s watching England warm up and it seems to consist of a ridiculously intense game of football and the Swann getting repeatedly hit in the face whilst attempting slip catches. Are things usually this amateur?” Theu just do that Swann thing for, umm, light relief. Or something. Plucky old Swanny, lifting everyone’s spirits by acting the clown. I hope. “PS” Gavin adds, “tickets 80 quid apparently.”

A declaration on the declaration. Yes, England could have batted on towards lunch yesterday, looking to add another 60-odd runs and take another 20-odd overs out of the game, swinging the balance of Australia’s chase from “improbable” to “all-but-impossible”. But they didn’t. And they were right not too. When the decision was made it was raining – play started 15 minutes late – and the forecast showed that more rain, much more rain was coming. It was the right decision. Just imagine what a panning England would have got if they had batted on and the weather forecasters had got it right.

Some of you, it seems, agree. “Does anybody else feel a bit sorry for Andrew Strauss?” asks Matthew Kilsby, “Slated by Vic Marks for being too aggressive and slated by Mike Brierley for being too conservative. Who’s be England captain, eh? I reckon he has had a decent game and, if they hadn’t declared when they did, they probably wouldn’t have taken any Aussie wickets yesterday. The morning was clearly the best time to bowl as it offered the friendliest conditions on a wicket that is still flat. As for today: don’t worry, we’ll be fine.”

The pessimists just won’t be deterred, as Nick Byren shows: “Am I the only one who has Australia as out right favourites? This is classic England stuff it up territory. Tuffers commented after Day 3 that if England lose from this position there’ll be no way back for their crumpled morale and depressingly I think he might be right.” Look. Just take a moment to think of it this way: imagine this was any other damn team except Australia, faced with the prospect of scoring 209 runs on a fifth day pitch using only their nos 5 and 7, plus their raw tail against an attack that had been utterly rampant for the majority of the match. How do you like them apples?

Here come the players… and there goes my gut. Yes, my self-assurance is a massive bluff. I’m just as nervous as the rest of you.

Australia need 209, England need five wickets.

87th Australia 313-5 (Clarke 125, Haddin 80) need 522
Anderson’s first delivery is full, straight and inswinging. It beats the inside of Clarke’s bat and rouses a reassuring LBW appeal from England. And the next ball curves down the leg side, clipping Clarke’s pads as it flies behind into Prior’s gloves. Another appeal, for caught behind, is turned down by umpire Doctrove. And the fourth is the best appeal yet, swinging back towards off as Clarke pads up. It was a tad too high and a tad too wide for Doctrove to give it. Just the three appeals in the first over then. If you need a reminder of hard this will be for Australia, that was it. “What’s the weather like there?” asks Jason in Dublin, “Are there clouds overhead? Will bowling conditions be favourable this morning.” It’s a little humid, a touch overcast, and otherwise sunny. There’s no chance of rain as far as I know.

WICKET! Haddin 80 c Collingwood b Flintoff (88th over Australia 313-6 need 522) Flintoff to Haddin. His first two balls are short and straight, the second flicking off the inside edge and looping to leg. “Get a short leg in!” grunt both Bumble and Smyth, with uncanny synchronicity. “Why do I feel that we won’t get any decisions from the umpires today,” asks Andy Bradshaw, “not that he really needs an answer after yesterday’s events, even if its a complete no-brainer?” GOTTIM! They don’t need the umpires to give that one! Flintoff finds Haddin’s edge and the ball shoots straight into Collingwood’s hands at third slip. England made that look very easy indeed. That was great bowling by Flintoff, far too good for Haddin. A fierce, short and snorting delivery that flew off the edge. And a good catch by Colly too, low down to his right. A wicket maiden from England’s titan.

89th over: Australia 314-6 (Clarke 126, Johnson 0) need 522
Clarke turns the first run of the morning through leg, putting Johnson on strike and leaving Anderson licking his lips. That hissing you just heard was, as David Hibell writes, “the sound of 1,000s of people across the country breathing a huge sigh of relief.”

90th over: Australia 317-6 (Clarke 127, Johnson 0) need 522
Much as events at Cardiff suggested otherwise, this is not the England team we are used to from Ashes past, and it’s certainly not the Australian team we grew old and weary watching through the last twenty years. Flintoff fires in a mean yorker at Clarke, who drops the bat down in good time to block it out. In doing so he damages his bat – which was breaking up yesterday, he had to stop play to tape it up – and Stuart Clark runs out with a new one for him. Flintoff fires down a bouncer, Clarke ducks into it, and wears it on the back of the helmet. His face as the ball hits is a picture of a man struck with shock and awe. He throws his bat at the next. If it had been a better shot he would only have edged it behind. Awesome stuff from Flintoff. Every ball of this over has been above 90mph, and not one of them has been remotely off target. Johnson, put on strike by a single, edges the next just short of Paul Collingwood at slip. The sixth ball is unplayable, and whizzes past bat, batsman and ‘keeper and away for a bye.

91st over: Australia 321-6 (Clarke 127, Johnson 4) need 522
“Without wanting to sound like a coward (which is hard, because I am), I can’t take this again,” writes Anthony Pease, “I’m tempted to turn off TMS, and eschew the OBO until this match draws out to its inevitable, ghastly conclusion. Would it be possible for you to arrange a large klaxon to be sounded from the top of Guardian Towers once the match is over? How does one honk for a loss, two honks for an unbelievably bad loss sound?” Johnson looks altogether more comfortable against Anderson, getting his bat firmly behind the ball. “Surely Johnson will be out for single figures since he is working as a double agent this summer,” muses Gerald Davies, “I wonder how much we bunged him?” If you’re right, it’s an elaborate bluff because he has just hammered four through extra cover off the back foot.

92nd over: Australia 329-6 (Clarke 128, Johnson 10) need 522
Flintoff bangs in a vicious delivery towards Clarke’s body, the ball hitting him on the hip. “Every time I see him I think, ‘Jeez, I wish I played with Andrew Flintoff” says Warne. Compliments don’t come much higher. Clarke takes a single, putting plenty of faith in his partner. A no-ball from Flintoff, but otherwise it would have been out. It was a 93mph knee-high full toss that his Johnson squarely on the knee roll. He taps the next delivery away square for two runs to leg. Johnson throws a drive at the sixth ball and carves it in the air through cover for four. This bloke is a very, very dangerous player and England need to get him out quick sharp.

93rd over: Australia 331-6 (Clarke 128, Johnson 11) need 522
The first bowling change of the day sees Stuart Broad come into the attack. A good point this, not for us so much as for the players, from Chris Henderson: “Am I the only one not relaxing very much at England taking an early wicket? If this match carries on following recent Ashes form, Clarke and Johnson will now quietly add 100 before lunch while we’re still all breathing sighs of relief and not really paying attention.” A much quieter over this, featuring a pair of singles and nary an appeal.

94th over: Australia 335-6 (Clarke 128, Johnson 15) need 522
Flintoff digs in a bouncer that spits up at Johnson’s throat. He does very well to get his bat behind it and play it down to the off side. But he’s obviously unsettled: he flails a wild hook at the next delivery, misses it entirely and wears it on his shoulder instead. He does it again two balls later, but this time he makes contact and the ball rockets away through deep backward square for four. That means Australia need another 187. A good email this, from Will Sinclair, who is watching from between his fingers behind a couch in Sydney: “Forget about early declarations, and poor umpiring, and contentious catches. This game was won and lost on the first morning, when Strauss and Cook took advantage of some DREADFUL Australian bowling to put on two hundred runs without loss. In the context of this game that was huge, and those two hundred runs are more or less the difference between the two teams.”

95th over: Australia 343-6 (Clarke 136, Johnson 16) need 522
Broad’s first ball is on a nice, boring line outside off stump, inviting the mistake. That will do very well from him today. Clarke pushes a single past point from the next delivery, and Johnson then edges the next behind! But it lands a foot or so in front of Flintoff at slip. He does well to cut it off at all. And that’s a lovely shot from Clarke, stepping out and cover-driving two runs to Ravi Bopara in the deep. Broad responds by pushing his next ball out even wider. Clarke punishes the next, threading it between extra cover and mid-off for four. A single bead of sweat begins to trickle its way down my brow.

96th over: Australia 346-6 (Clarke 136, Johnson 19) need 522
Flintoff is bowling one of his very finest spells here. He beats Johnson’s outside edge, then fires one in at his pads and roars out an LBW appeal. The third ball is short and Johnson almost errs and plays it onto his wicket. He catches the next one though, and clumps it out through cover for three runs. He’s beginning to tire though, is Flintoff, and his speed is finally dipping a touch below 90mph.

97th over: Australia 353-6 (Clarke 136, Johnson 26) need 522
Broad comes around the wicket to Johnson. “I am worried about Johnson” Ian Palmer, that makes you no different to the rest of us, “he has been battered in the press, and that would make a good story. I am worried about Hauritz as he has a broken finger, and has been pilloried in the press, and that would be a good story. I am worried about about Hilfenhaus as he has a good beard. I am worried.” Broad holds to his line wide on the crease – he looks a much better bowler when he does that – and lures Johnson into chasing one. Oh but the next disappears through cover for four, raising the 350 for Australia and leaving them needing 172 to win. He taps the next away to long-on for three more. The bead of sweat has made its way down my cheek and onto my neck…

98th over: Australia 356-6 (Clarke 136, Johnson 26) need 522
Flintoff is still on, but I wonder whether Strauss isn’t thinking about his next bowling change. Johnson has made his way through 39 deliveries so far. On the pavilion balcony, Ricky Ponting frowns and chews a wad of gum. Another vicious bouncer from Flintoff, this one bangs Johnson’s bat handle and squirts away to gully. “What is it with the English mentality?” asks Neil Toolan, as though 2,000 odd years of cultural development could be distilled into one pithy OBO entry, “Before any major sporting competition we have this blind faith that we are going to win, but when it comes to squeaky bum time we always start to fear the worst. If the boot was on the other foot I doubt there would be a single Australian thinking they could lose this, where as I think there are probably more Aussies who think they can win this at the moment than English people thinking we can win it!”

WICKET! Clarke 136 b Swann (99th over: Australia 361-7) need 522
A gambler’s gambit from Strauss, throwing the ball to Graeme Swann. Clarke immediately comes skipping down the pitch. He’s gone! Swann has struck! He’s got his man! Clarke almost yorked himself, coming down the pitch and being beaten by a fuller ball that dipped and turned and ripped out off stump. An inspired bowling change by Strauss, and a fine piece of bowling by Swann. Clarke goes off the pitch to a rousing ovation from a crowd who you guess are celebrating the fact that he has been dismissed rather than the simply applauding his outstanding innings. That was a lovely ball from Swann, as the replays show. The ball drifted away from Clarke towards slip, beat the outside edge, then turned back to his the wicket.

WICKET! Hauritz 1 b Flintoff (100th over: Australia 367-8) need 522
Ricky Ponting is now biting his nail furiously. That was one of the great Ashes innings by Clarke, the memory of which shouldn’t be eclipsed by the fact it looks as though it will have come in a losing cause. And there goes Hauritz! That’s four for Flintoff, courtesy of a serious misjudgement from the batsman, who shouldered arms to a ball that slanted back in at his wicket and knocked over his off stump. Siddle is in, and England are now just two wickets away from the win. These are now Flintoff’s best-ever figures (24-4-69-4) at Lord’s, in his final Test innings at the ground. He almost completes his five-for with a yorker, but Siddle just squeezes it away square for four.

101st over: Australia 375-8 (Johnson 36, Siddle 5) need 522
Johnson drives four out through cover. That is almost a sensational catch by Swann! Johnson drives the ball back towards mid-off and Swann dives full stretch out to his right and gets his hand to the ball, but it just tumbles to earth as he hits the ground. I do believe that Swann is rather enjoying himself here.

102nd over: Australia 381-8 (Johnson 41, Siddle 6) need 522 Smyth here. Bull has gone for what is rather absurdly called a comfort break. This is not permitted in the OBO regulations, of course, so he’ll be docked 10 per cent of his match fee as a result. Four pence, I think that comes to. Johnson, who simply must go into Nathan Astle 2001-02 mode now, drives Flintoff through mid-off for four with intimidating authority. There is almost something Haydenish about the way he stands tall and blitzes you down the ground.

103rd over: Australia 385-8 (Johnson 48, Siddle 6) need 522
“Sir Flintoff!” shouts Richard Harris, “Can I be the first one to propose that Flintoff be knighted – Is the Queen there today? If someone has a rusty sword hanging around she could do the job on the outfield as in days of yore!” Good grief. Just think of it. This is the man who urinated in Tony Blair’s rose bush. Johnson goes imperiously on. England still need his wicket. And there he shows why: he drops to one knee and thwacks four through long-on.

WICKET! Siddle 7 b Flintoff (103rd over: Australia 389-9) need 522
Flintoff continues, the Trojan. “England need to have this match sewn up by lunch,” points out Andy Plowman, “If not, expect Smyth’s presence after lunch to inspire the tailenders to compile a match-winning last stand.” Flintoff is in hot pursuit of his five-for. I don’t think Strauss could get the ball off him even if he wanted to. And Fred has his five-for! His first since 2005! He’s slid his sixth ball between Siddle’s bat and pad and clattered over the stumps. He sticks both arms aloft and turns around the ground to wave to the crowd. But they just won’t stop cheering. Fred doffs his sunhat by way of further acknowledgement.

103rd over: Australia 393-9 (Johnson 51, Hilfenhaus 3) need 522
Swann continues, over and around the wicket. “Urinated on Blair’s roses?” scoffs Alastair Morrison, “Elevate the man to the peerage – can I be the first to propose his Lordship.”

104th over: Australia 403-9 (Johnson 61, Hilfenhaus 3) need 522
“Note to Mr.Strauss:” writes Max Mudrik, “He’s got the five-for. Please, please rest him. There is no way you will get 20 wickets again without him.” Even as I copy and paste that in, Nasser Hussain makes exactly the same point. Fred’s spell toady is 12-1-47-3. Not bad for a crocked lad, eh? Johnson is still going though, and forces four through long-off from the final ball of the over.

WICKET! Johnson 63 b Swann 105th over: Australia 406 (Hilfenhaus 4)
Johnson swings a wild slog-sweep at a full ball from Swann, bowled from around the wicket. He misses by a distance. But when he repeats the shot he connects and the ball is clobbered away to mid-wicket for two. Apparently the site is having technical problems at the moment. Sorry about that. But then it wouldn’t be an OBO without a few gremlins, would it? That’s it! Swann takes the final wicket and it is all over! England have won by 115 runs!

England are 1-0 up in the Ashes! And have beaten Australia at Lord’s for the first time since 1934. Fred leads the team off the field, saluting the deafening roars of the crowd as he walks off. He finishes with figures of 27-4-92-5, and a word too for Graeme Swann, who took 28-3-87-4, with that key wicket of Michael Clarke.

Let me just pause for breath a second, then I’ll be back to indulge in a little post-match chat. If any of you want to get your gloating / ‘I told you so’ / Fred can’t retire! / hahahahahaha / we wuz robbed / emails in, now is the time to do it.

Well, the post-match awards are taking place. “We were outplayed right through the course of the game” says Ricky Ponting, “from the first ball to the last.” Australia start a three-day game against Northamptonshire on Friday, when they will start their counter-attack. It’s coming people. They will not be so easily beaten again in this series. “Do you sense Australia didn’t get the rub of the green in this game?” asks Atherton, “it’s irrelevant now, we’ve lost the game and we can’t complain.” That was well said by him, and he grins as he gets a round of applause from the crowd. “Only one thing spoils the joy of following your coverage today” says Julian Archer, “the Guardian web page has removed the “related article” link which read “McGrath predicts clean sweep for Australia”…”

“I want to give a special mention to Andrew Flintoff” says Andy Strauss, “he was magnificent throughout.” The crowd cheers in agreement, and Fred modestly picks at a fingernail. Man of the match is, unsurprisingly, England Rudi Koertzen Andy Flintoff.

Fred steps up, a broad grin on his face. “Mate there was no chance Strauss would get that ball off me,” he beams, “there are times when you’re a bit tired, and your body is aching but the crowd gets behind you and you just keep going.”

Here’s Andrew MacInally: “It would be really fantastic if the Oz contributors to this OBO chat would gracefully acknowledge that, just this once, they have been beaten by the better team. No grousing, moaning about No-Balls (excuse the pun), bad Ump decisions etc. It would be nice but I don’t expect it.” Eat your words MacInally, here is Eamonn Maloney: “Good show old chap, see you in Edgbaston” and Neil Stork-Brett: “I actually feel privileged to have seen England win their 1st Ashes Test at Lords since 1934! To see history in the making makes up for the bitter taste of defeat. It’s a good day to be a cricket fan.”

Spare a thought for that man Michael Clarke, which is just what Ranil Dissanyake is doing: “In the midst of the celebrations, I think we should mark this match – It could well herald the emergence of Michael Clarke as one of the very best batsmen in the world. I don’t think we’ve seen his talent matched by concentration and a sense of occasion as we had yesterday in any innings he’s played to date.”

And as Lou Roper points out England still have plenty of things to worry about: “I wouldn’t be English if, notwithstanding glorious victory today, I didn’t worry about the fitness of Flintoff (especially after today’s labours) and Pietersen for the rest of the series. If they are unavailable for selection (or hobbled) are we left hoping for the continued difficulties of Johnson and Hughes will carry the Ashes back to Blighty?”

Well the ground is emptying, and the players have long since disappeared for a beer. But I know a lot of you will want to dwell on this for a while yet, Vic Marks’ report from the final day of this marvellous Test match, or go and have your say on how you think the players rated here.

I’m going to wrap this up now, but you can carry on over on Paul Weaver’s freshly minted blog. A little ridiculously, I’m missing the next Test because I’m going to cover the world swimming championships. You’ll be entirely in Rob Smyth’s clammy hands for that Test, and I’ll be following it like the rest of you, right here on the OBO. For now, thanks for the company and all the emails. It’s been a pleasure. And a final thought, one shared by so many of you in my inbox – is it cowardly to pray for a month of rain? Bye.

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


Prior wants huge England effort

Matt Prior has urged England’s bowlers to dig deep and produce a huge effort as they push for victory in the second Test against Australia at Lord’s.

The wicketkeeper top-scored with 61 as England reached 311-6 at stumps on day three to open up a 521-run lead.

With England set to declare early on Sunday, Prior said: "We’re asking for one more big push from all the bowlers.

"We’ve seen over the last three days the minute the cloud cover comes over, the ball starts swinging."

Prior revealed England would have pressed for a declaration in the final hour to give Australia’s openers a testing half an hour to contend before the close of play.

However, the intervention of rain ended any hopes of England bowling again on day three.

"It would have been a great opportunity to come out and have half an hour to bowl at them this evening and pick a wicket up," Prior told BBC Radio 5 Live.

"Unfortunately, due to the weather, that was not to happen.

"But we will come back tomorrow knowing we are in a great position and push really hard to win this Test match."

606: DEBATE

"This Aussie batting isn’t going to get to 250-300 at Lords with cloud cover against the four-man pace attack"

TheBear44

Prior’s superb cameo – coming off just 48 deliveries – and Paul Collingwood’s 54 injected fresh impetus into England’s stalling innings after a laboured afternoon session when Kevin Pietersen and Ravi Bopara were pinned back by Australia’s bowlers.

"Ravi and KP went through a real tough spell, I though the Aussies bowled really well in that period," added Prior.

"They stuck in and ground it out and left the door open for Colly and I to have a nice period."

With two days remaining, England are perfectly placed to record their first Test victory against Australia at Lord’s since 1934.

Although weather forecasts predict rain showers on Sunday, Prior believes the overcast conditions and a wearing pitch will favour England’s bowling attack.

"The overheads might come into it – and don’t forget (Graeme) Swanny," he added.

"It’s just started to spin a little bit and we’ve seen what he can do with the ball. We’re in a great position."

Nathan Hauritz, who contributed 24 in a spirited 44-run ninth-wicket stand with Peter Siddle in the morning session, was the pick of Australia’s bowlers, taking 3-80.

And the off-spinner called on Australia’s top order to frustrate England’s quintet of bowlers as they search for the opening victory of the series.

"We have the opportunity to bat for a very long time and the wicket is still very good," said the 27-year-old.

"It’s going to be a good battle – we’ve got a lot of experience in the batting order to get the job done.

"We scored over 600 in Cardiff on a very good wicket and we always back ourselves to win the game.

"The wicket still looks very good – there was a bit of turn and bounce for me. But the key is the new ball – we have to get through that period and take it from there."</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

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.

Strauss defies Australian fightback

England 364–6
Australia

A position of strength, a chance to nail Australia with the game still in its infancy, was squandered wantonly by the fragile England middle order. An opening partnership of 196 between Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook, the highest England have made against Australia at Lord’s, had the shirt-sleeved crowd bubbling. England were romping, Australia a rabble.

But this is England and it had to be too good to last. Cook, five short of a third century at Lord’s, became an unexpected victim for Mitchell Johnson, whose bowling had been so inept, such utter garbage, that doubts were being cast on whether his South African heroics were a myth, concocted in the same studio in which conspiracy theorists insist the moon landings were fabricated.

The wicket set in motion a change in fortune in which Australia, held together by the excellent swing bowling of Ben Hilfenhaus, regained their composure as a drunk might sober up. By the time Andrew Flintoff – fit to play and greeted rapturously as he bounded helmetless down the pavilion steps – edged him to second slip, six wickets had tumbled in the afternoon for 137 runs, bringing Australia back into the game without the benefit of the new ball.

Ponting took it with four overs of the day left, to no further avail, and England must attempt to capitalise tomorrow morning. Much will depend on Strauss, who, leading magnificently, batted all day in reaching an unbeaten 161, 16 short of his Test best and his fourth and highest Test hundred on this ground. Shortly before stumps he reached 5,000 Test runs.

On Tuesday evening, at a dinner in the Long Room for his benefit, footage of Strauss’s career had been played. It had reminded the viewer that the 2005 Ashes success was not all about Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen and that at Old Trafford and The Oval, Strauss had made centuries. There was no reference, though, to the tribulations that followed in Australia in 2006-07, when brilliant planning and execution deprived him of his square cut and pulls. It took him a year to recover.

Yesterday, as if in an act of benevolence, he was fed once more, a mere handful of his runs coming in areas other than the segment between midwicket and extra cover. One on drive apart, late on in the piece, his 22 boundaries were carved away square of the wicket, clipped, angled to third man or, twice, slog-swept to midwicket.

While Cook was there, swatting boundaries across an outfield as fast as Turnberry’s greens, the sky had seemed the limit, although the Essex opener will play better for less reward. He was spoon-fed mediocre longhops by Johnson. The pitch was good – not fast as had been seen earlier in the summer against West Indies but not sluggish like Cardiff last week either – but had Australians other than Hilfenhaus had the capacity to exploit it there was movement in the air and a little off the seam down the slope. Top bowling all round would have had its reward.

Instead, galácticos from the great Australian sides sat in their commentary positions and hospitality boxes and saw, Hilfenhaus excepted, a display of shambolic incompetence. Perhaps the Lord’s experience proved overwhelming for those on their first trip. Bowling was off target, fielding ponderous and wicketkeeping comedic (although the ball dipping and swinging after it had passed the batsman did not help).

A blow was suffered shortly after lunch, when Nathan Hauritz dislocated the middle finger of his bowling hand in attempting to catch a straight drive from Strauss, then on 52. It was the only real chance he was to offer in more than six hours, although four runs previously Brad Haddin had dropped him from a Hilfenhaus no ball.

Cook’s dismissal brought in Ravi Bopara, who played with panache for 20 minutes or so, as if trying to prove a point. If he is to survive at No3 he has to learn, fast, about substance over style. A three-card trick from Hilfenhaus, the oldest of ploys on this ground, saw Bopara middle a couple of away-swingers, only to play outside the sucker ball that shaded down the slope.

A frenetic effort followed from Pietersen, either side of tea. It was the sort of innings that would be played by someone overdosing on SunnyD and it ended when he feathered an away-swinger from Peter Siddle, who had begun to find his feet after a shaky start. Paul Collingwood’s insipid chip to mid on and Matt Prior’s extravagant drive, beaten and bowled by Johnson’s in-swing – rare as hens’ teeth this summer – brought the only headshaking emotion from Strauss.

Much tomorrow will depend on the fortunes of the lower order against the new ball, and the weather. Heavy rain is due to pass through in the night but England, having included Graham Onions in their side at the expense of Monty Panesar, and sent Steve Harmison to Trent Bridge to rejoin Durham, will want to see the ball swing as it did for Hilfenhaus. If they can harness that, and Jimmy Anderson and Onions can flourish, then they can put Australia under real pressure. If not, there could be some long hours in the field once more.

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



Harmison called in to cover Flintoff

• Harmison comes in amid concerns over Flintoff’s knee
• Monty Panesar remains in 14-man squad for Lord’s Test

England have made one change ahead of the second Ashes Test against Australia, with pace bowler Steve Harmison coming in to a 14-man squad. He is to provide cover for Andrew Flintoff, who injured his knee in Cardiff.

Monty Panesar, whose heroics with the bat drew attention away from figures of one for 115 on a spinner’s wicket, retains his place in the squad, as do Ian Bell and Graham Onions, both discarded for the first Test.

“We have added Stephen Harmison to our squad for the next Test match as Andrew Flintoff injured his right knee at Cardiff and will undergo a precautionary scan later today,” said national selector Geoff Miller.

“Andrew is experiencing soreness and swelling in the knee which he twisted while in the field and he will be reassessed by the medical staff over the next 48 hours leading up to the Test match on Thursday.

“In the event of Andrew being unfit, we see Stephen as a like for like replacement in terms of the type of bowler he is and his ability to unsettle the opposition batsmen with pace and bounce.

“But we will need to consider all our options carefully when we come to determine the make-up of our bowling attack at Lord’s and the final decision will depend on our assessment of the pitch and the likely overhead conditions.”

Squad for the second Test

Andrew Strauss (capt), Middlesex; James Anderson, Lancashire; Ian Bell, Warwickshire; Ravi Bopara, Essex; Stuart Broad, Nottinghamshire; Paul Collingwood, Durham; Alastair Cook, Essex; Andrew Flintoff, Lancashire; Stephen Harmison, Durham; Graham Onions, Durham; Monty Panesar, Northamptonshire; Kevin Pietersen, Hampshire; Matt Prior, Sussex; Graeme Swann, Nottinghamshire

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


Oz batsmen move up Reliance Mobile ICC player rankings

Australia’s batsmen are on the move in the ICC Player Rankings for Test batsmen with three of them achieving career-best rankings after a nail-biting finish in the first Ashes Test against England at Cardiff.
Opener Simon Katich, middle-order batsmen Marcus North and wicket-keeper Brad Haddin all scored centuries to help Australia declare its first innings at [...]

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

Ben Hilfenhaus celebrates the wicket of Ravi Bopara

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.

606: DEBATE

"Placed a huge bet on Australia winning 5-0. I’m English myself – may as well make some cash out of this shambles"

mynameisjoshua

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.

Brad Haddin and Marcus North

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.