Australian opener Phil Hughes’ latest failure has heaped yet more pressure on skipper Ricky Ponting ahead of next week’s Third Test at Edgbaston.
Opener Hughes made just 10 in a warm-up game at Northampton on Friday and remains horribly out of touch just when Ponting needs him to start firing.
England’s fast bowlers gave him a real [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Ricky Ponting’
Hughes’ latest failure puts more pressure on Aussies
Allan Border defends Ponting’s captaincy
Former Australian cricket captain Allan Border has defended Ricky Ponting’s captaincy in the face of criticism following Australia’s dismal performances in both the Test matches of the Ashes series.
“When Ricky took over with the likes of Warne and McGrath, the team wasn”t all that different and he kept the ball rolling after Steve Waugh. [...]
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.”
Ponting laughs off crowd animosity
• Captain still believes teams are well matched
• Ponting says Johnson needs to be managed carefully
The present is tough enough for Ricky Ponting without the past tapping him on the shoulder too, but today the weight of history felt as burdensome as it can ever have done during a heady 133-Test career. No Australia captain has led his side to defeat at Lord’s since Bill Woodfull in 1934; no Australia captain has lost two series in England since Billy Murdoch in the 19th century. For a team that makes much of its heritage, these are troubling times.
Very little went right for Ponting here. He was given out caught when he did not hit it, he remains 25 runs short of passing Allan Border’s Australian Test record of 11,174 runs, and he was forced to juggle an attack in which the spearhead went awol and the spinner dislocated a finger on his bowling hand. Throw in a dropped catch at slip, a mild show of dissent and the unstinting derision of the crowd, and it felt like the Lord’s karmic wheel had decided to whirr furiously in one direction after spinning gently for 75 years in the other.
“I got my first clap as I got off the stage from my post-game interview,” said Ponting with a smile. “It took me cracking a joke to get a laugh out of the crowd. I’m not sure what all the animosity was there. They seemed to take great pleasure in me dropping that catch. There were about 15 replays in two overs: I was counting them. Hopefully I won a few hearts over at the end of the day, but I won’t lose any sleep about it.”
More likely to induce insomnia is the current state of Australia’s bowling attack, in particular the form of Mitchell Johnson, who took three for 200 in this Test while leaking more than five an over and bowled as poorly as any Australia seamer since Ponting’s uncle, Greg Campbell, took one for 82 off 14 overs at Headingley in 1989.
“Troy [Cooley, Australia's bowling coach] is obviously working really closely with Mitchell,” said Ponting. “What you don’t want to do with youngish blokes – Mitch has only played 20-odd Tests and is still pretty new to fast bowling – is fill their heads full of too much. We have to be careful how we manage him, and hopefully we’ll see some improvement from him in Northampton, if he does happen to play that game.”
Australia’s three-day match against Northamptonshire, starting on Friday, now assumes greater importance than the tourists could ever have imagined. Johnson’s form has been a worry ever since he wasted the second new ball on the last evening in Cardiff, but Brett Lee has not started bowling after picking up a rib injury in the warm-up game against England Lions at Worcester and Shane Watson – more of a batting all-rounder – is regarded by many as an injury waiting to happen.
Ponting’s hope, though, is that Johnson can recover from the battering his bowling analysis and supposedly frail temperament have taken in the past few days. “It was only a couple of games ago that he was bowling as well as anyone going around,” he said. “It’s not as if he’s lost everything he’s ever had. He’ll work hard over the next 10 days to give himself the best chance to keep improving.”
Today, though, Ponting was consoling himself with the thought that Cardiff was a closer reflection of the difference between the sides than Lord’s, saying: “It was only a week ago that we dominated the Test match. It’s important that all the players don’t forget that. I said right from the start I didn’t think there would be a lot between the sides. It’s grabbing the momentum when you can and running with it for as long as you can that’s going to decide this series.
“If you look at this game, they grabbed the momentum on day one, and we found it hard to wrest that back. A lot of Test matches are won in the first hour and we were a fair bit off at the start. There are fundamental skill errors we have made, and I’m not just talking about the bowling. We have to make sure we’re a whole lot better when we start the third one.”
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.
Superb England dominate Australia
Second Ashes Test, Lord’s (day two): England 425 v Australia 156-8
Match scorecard

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Lord’s
James Anderson took four wickets as England seized control of the second Ashes Test at Lord’s with a tremendous bowling display late on the second day.
Replying to England’s 425, Australia had recovered from a poor start in which they slid to 10-2 and soon after tea had reached a solid position of 103-2.
But an outstanding running catch by Stuart Broad at fine leg to end Simon Katich’s innings on 48 triggered a collapse in which the Aussies crashed to 152-8, losing six wickets for 49 in 15 overs – a passage of play that will live long in the memories of those who witnessed it.
At stumps, with bad light having finally suspended Australia’s agonising slump, Australia were still 269 runs behind on 156-8, and needing another 70 to avoid the follow-on.
With a five-man bowling attack at his disposal captain Andrew Strauss will be tempted to impose the follow-on should he have the option to do so on Saturday.
Anderson, swinging the ball both ways under a thick blanket of grey cloud, ended the day with 4-36 having started it with a boisterous 29 in a 47-run partnership for the last wicket with Graham Onions.
Anderson was well supported by the other three seamers in England’s attack, and it was Onions who took the vital wicket of Katich, before Andrew Flintoff added an equally important strike, removing Michael Hussey for 51.
The excitement built as a capacity crowd stayed long beyond the scheduled 1800 BST finish – the delay imposed following two half-hour breaks for rain between lunch and tea.
And, to the delight of the home crowd, the wickets kept coming, with floodlights – used for the first time in a Test at Lord’s – permitting the play to continue.

England’s eventual first-innings total from an overnight 364-6 did not look outstanding on paper. But given that Strauss failed to add to his overnight 161 (bowled second ball by Ben Hilfenhaus as he shouldered arms), and that both Graeme Swann and Stuart Broad were swiftly despatched, it was not a bad result at all.
Anderson struck five boundaries off the inconsistent Mitchell Johnson, with some inventive shot-making through the off-side.
Ominously, the ball was swinging, but it was just that Australia were bowling poorly at England’s 10 and 11. However, the crowd’s fun was finally ended when Johnson switched to round the wicket and Anderson edged to gully.
Johnson ended with expensive figures of 3-132 from 21.4 overs. Here, as at Cardiff, he had been comfortably outshone by his new-ball partner Hilfenhaus (4-103).
The cricketing gods were certainly shining on Anderson, who removed Phillip Hughes for four in his second over, the third of the Australia innings, as he unluckily gloved a poor ball down the leg-side to Matt Prior.
And he also bowled some fine deliveries at Ricky Ponting, arrowing several balls at his off-stump, while also swinging some away. It was the non-swinging delivery that ended the innings of the Australian captain – in curious circumstances.
Anderson sent down a full-length ball which hit Ponting’s pad in front of the stumps, and the bowler immediately appealed for lbw. The ball then cannoned into Strauss’s hands at slip and there was a secondary appeal – for a catch.
Umpire Rudi Koertzen consulted his colleague at square-leg, Billy Doctrove, who agreed the catch had carried to Strauss – and Ponting was duly given out caught. As it happened, the replays showed it was lbw as no bat was involved, but the Australian captain was not exactly thrilled with the outcome.
The afternoon session began 10 minutes late to account for the fact that the players had been presented to the Queen, and was otherwise filled with showers and some doughty batting between Katich and Hussey.
Hussey was the more fluent of the two Aussie lefties, his cover-drive for four off Broad bringing up the 50-run stand.
606: DEBATE"To enforce the follow-on, or not Bat on, make at least 250 and set them a near impossible target"
Silk
Onions was the last of the four seamers to be given a go but, just as Broad before him, struggled for rhythm and when tea was taken late at 1620 BST Australia were in much better shape at 87-2.
Things improved further for the tourists when they raised the team 100 without further loss in an Onions over costing 10, but Strauss gave the Durham man another over and he repaid that faith with a well-directed bouncer at Katich.
Broad, at fine-leg, picked up Katich’s top-edged hook early but had to sprint 20 yards to his right to get to the chance, and, when he did, took the ball on the dive with both hands for a stunning catch.
Flintoff had been intelligently rested since lunch and in the midst of a ferocious six-over spell picked up the next breakthrough – the massive one of Hussey, who chose to leave a delivery pitching just back of a length, which hurried on and crashed into the top of off-stump.
Just four balls later, Australia vice-captain Michael Clarke was making the long walk back to the pavilion, after flicking Anderson’s inswinger to short midwicket, where Alastair Cook took a good, low catch and at 111-5 Australia were in big trouble.
Brad Haddin played brightly, but Marcus North’s contribution was a 14-ball duck, which ended when he bottom-edged a pull off Anderson onto his stumps.
Johnson has developed a reputation as a fearless lower-order hitter but only bothered the scorers for 11 deliveries, whereupon he hooked Broad straight to deep square-leg.
Cook easily swallowed that catch before collecting his third of the session when Haddin, who had played really well for his 28, completely misjudged his own pull shot and lobbed another easy chance to the Essex opening batsman.</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 live – England v Australia
Second Test, Lord’s, day two (1100 BST start):
LATEST ACTION (all times BST)
By Tom Fordyce
e-mail tms@bbc.co.uk (with ‘For Tom Fordyce’ in the subject), text 81111 (with "CRICKET" as first word) or use606. (Not all contributions can be used)
ENGLAND INNINGS
1119: 379-9 And so it comes down to Trevor Bailey and Chris Tavare, aka Monty and Jim. Anderson gets off the mark – of course he does – with a pushed single that almost sees Monty run out as he daydreams a dwardle down the track. An air of resigned shock around HQ.
Michael (having a difficult day), Cleadon, Sunderland, text 81111:>"It’s a miserable day up here, my girlfriend crashed her car with me in it this morning, I was late for work, I’m tired but at least my overly relaxed office don’t mind me catching up on the live text all day and I can really see Strauss…oh."
1115: 378-9 Three overs, three wickets, and that was a stinker – a big booming drive aimed at a full inswinger, and Broad’s castle is breached. Looking at the replays there was an inside edge, but the feet were rooted. Anyone want to start this morning again
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1113: WICKET Broad b Hilfenhaus 16, Eng 378-9 Jimmy Anderson now, and if we’re looking for silver linings, he’s got to be eyeing this enormo-swing and licking his Lancashire lips. Oh my giddy aunts – ANOTHER ONE’S GONE!
From James the geophysicist, TMS inbox: "Simon in Oxford, I will severely put myself out and completely change the non-existent plans I had on Sunday to take the Lord’s ticket off your hands. Don’t worry, I don’t expect any compensation."
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1107: WICKET Swann c Ponting b Siddle 4, Eng 370-8 Swanny to the trenches, and he gets off the mark with a clip off the toes for four. Short leg in for the Cardiff hopper. Siddle, a sweatband halfway up his forearm in the style of His Airness, gets dabbed away for a single legwards before a steepling lifter zips past Swann’s retreating ears. Another short one – and that’s got him, prodded feebly to second slip. Two overs, two wickets…Former England seamer Angus Fraser on TMS: "If England do get bowled out cheaply and the ball is moving around, it gives them the opportunity to get some early wickets."1103: Eng 364-7 If you’ve just spat your mid-morning cuppa at your PC screen, you’re not the only one. That one swung like Tarzan on a vine – starting out wide, dipping back in and banging back the off stump as Strauss shouldered arms. Calamitous start for England, joy unconfined for the tourists. Ricky Ponting’s face is in danger of splitting, his smile is so wide.
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1102: WICKET Strauss b Hilfenhaus 161, Eng 364-7 Here we go – Hilfenhaus to Strauss – and HE’S BOWLED HIM!1050: Traditional pre-bell heads-up – could you F5 it before we roll into action Video scorecard reasons. Reth’pect.From Simon in Oxford, TMS inbox: "I need advice. I have, this morning been offered the opportunity to come down to Lord’s on Sunday. Another friend has also offered me the chance to go to Turnberry. All the while it is my girlfriends birthday and I should really be with here in Manchester. I am in a severe quandary. Any suggestions"Former England spinner Phil Tufnell on TMS: "We’ve got to get up to 460 to put the Australians under pressure."Meanwhile, fresh from regaling his Wimbledon colleagues with tales of his past badminton glories, Radio One Newsbeat’s David Garrido has been ‘helping’ the Barmy Army take on the Aussie Fanatics. David describes his own bowling as "amazing".You be the judge by checking out his video of the match.1035: Humid out there at the mo. Could it swing Wrinkled old purveyors of wobble are sniffing the air like Bisto kids. There’s movement in them there clouds.BBC Sport’s Oliver Brett on Twitter:"Hauritz gingerly taking part in touch rugby, Watson – remember him – jogging around. Covers are being hauled off – should start on time."1025: Having said that, the covers are currently off at Lord’s. There’s rain forecast – it is the middle of July, after all – but there’ll be cricket this morning or my name’s Martin McCague.
1015: Morning – all well Hope you’ve packed your snorkels…
<br/
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
â€Hughes is twice as tough as I was,†says Steve Waugh
Former Australian cricket captain Steve Waugh has declared that opener Phillip Hughes is twice as tough as he was at the same age, as the young Australian continues his gruelling Ashes examination on cricket’’s most prestigious stage.
Waugh overcame a weakness against short-pitched bowling early in his career and Hughes faces a similar challenge, especially if [...]
Pick Harmison – Lord’s groundsman
• Mick Hunt backs the Durham fast bowler to thrive
• Andrew Flintoff’s knee keeps England sweating
England’s selectors have been urged to play Steve Harmison in the second Test against Australia tomorrow by the man who knows the pitch best.
The Lord’s groundsman, Mick Hunt, believes the Durham fast bowler has the pace and bounce to get the best out of the wicket, just as he did in 2005. “This pitch has a nice coverage of grass and maybe more pace and carry than we’ve sometimes had,” he said. “Harmison gave [Ricky] Ponting and [Justin] Langer a bit of a going over four years ago, so why not play him here? The pitch really looks the part and it may do a bit in the first session. It is also the same pitch that we used against Australia in 2005.” England lost the Ashes opener here four years ago but Harmison drew first blood, quite literally, when he struck Ponting on the cheek. He also hit the openers Langer and Matthew Hayden in a fiery burst in the opening session.
The England selectors are still sweating on the fitness of Andrew Flintoff, who batted both outdoors and indoors yesterday but did not bowl as he gave his sore right knee a chance to heal. “Fred saw his surgeon yesterday and he is quite optimistic about him playing in this Test,” England’s coach, Andy Flower, said yesterday. “He had an injection yesterday and we’re letting it settle down today, so he won’t bowl and just bat. But he will bowl tomorrow and we’ll see how he is and make a decision from there. Fred knows he body quite well now and he will know after training in the next couple of days whether he will be able to make a contribution to this Test.”
The player does not look quite the force he was in the 2005 series but even a reduced Flintoff would give England more balance. “He seems vulnerable a lot of the time,” Flower added. “But he’s a hell of a player and we want him in our side when he’s fit.”
If he is less than fully fit, however, and with a long summer ahead, it seems doubtful that he would be risked. He bowled 35 overs in Australia’s innings in the first Test, once again ridiculing suggestions that he would be used more selectively, in short bursts.
The third and fourth Tests in this series are also back-to-back and it is hard to see a player of his fragile tendencies playing a full part in the summer.
If Flintoff does not play tomorrow, Harmison surely will. “He is a like for like replacement for Fred,” Flower said. “They are both tall, quick bowlers. Steve is a very good fast bowler, he’s got a good record for England and he’s in form.” Ideally both Harmison and Flintoff will be charging in on Thursdaytomorrow but that looks doubtful.
Hughes ready for Harmison’s bouncer barrage
Australian opener Phillip Hughes has said that he is eyeing off another showdown with giant England quick Steve Harmison, who has been drafted into the host squad for the second Test, beginning at Lord’’s tomorrow.
Harmison twice bounced out Hughes in a tour match at Worcester and England insists the 20-year-old opener has a clear weakness [...]
Ponting trying to divert attention from Oz failure: Flower
Reacting for the first time after a spellbinding climax in the Cardiff Test, coach Andy Flower has said that Australian skipper Ricky Ponting by accusing the England team of delaying tactics, is trying to deflect attention from Australia’s failure to take the wicket they needed to go ahead in the Ashes series
The England’s [...]
Ponting isnâ€t a `crap’ captain, says Gillespie
Former Australian fast bowler Jason Gillespie has said that Ricky Ponting’s captaincy isn’t “crapâ€, and told critics to lay off.
Responding to comments made by former fast bowler Jeff Thomson, Gillespie told Sun Sport: “I find the questioning of his captaincy baffling – this guy will go down as one of the best Australian captains. I [...]
Strauss denies Ashes time-wasting
• ‘If Ricky’s angry, that’s a shame,’ says England captain
• ‘They can play whatever way they want to play,’ says Ponting
Andrew Strauss last night denied his team had contravened the spirit of the game after the Australia captain, Ricky Ponting, accused England of “pretty ordinary” time-wasting tactics in the fraught final stages of the drawn first Test in Cardiff.
England sent on their 12th man, Bilal Shafayat, twice in the space of five minutes – the second time accompanied by their physio, Steve McCaig – as the last pair of Jimmy Anderson and Monty Panesar kept Australia’s bowlers at bay for 69 nerve-racking deliveries, prompting an irritated Ponting to declare the matter would be taken up with the England management.
But Strauss was unrepentant. “There was a lot of confusion to be fair,” he said. “We first sent the 12th man out to let Jimmy and Monty know there was a time issue rather than just overs. And then some drink was spilled on his gloves and, when Jimmy called up to the dressing room, we weren’t sure whether he needed the 12th man or the physio.
“If Ricky’s angry, that’s a shame. I don’t think we were deliberately trying to waste a huge amount of time. They weren’t our tactics, as both of the guys were playing pretty well in the middle. The reality of the situation is that Australia couldn’t take that final wicket and we got away with the draw.”
• Poll: Were England guilty of deliberate time-wasting?
• Mike Selvey: England cannot afford to gloat after draw
• It’s just part of the game, admits Australia’s Hauritz
• Relive the final day with our over-by-over account
Ponting saw the matter differently after his side failed to make the breakthrough that would have given Australia a 1-0 lead in the series going into Thursday’s second Test at Lord’s and a fifth-straight win in the opening match of an Ashes contest. “It was pretty ordinary,” he said of England’s tactics. “They can play whatever way they want to play. We will do everything we can to play by the rules and the spirit of the game. I don’t think it was required. They had changed gloves before, so I’m not sure they were going to be too sweaty after one over. I am not sure what the physio was doing out there. I think a few guys were questioning the umpires. I think a few guys were also questioning the 12th man. I am sure others will be taking it up with the England hierarchy as they should.”
Ponting did, however, play down a potential flashpoint before the start of play when Kevin Pietersen hit a practice ball towards the Australian contingent and was briefly confronted by Mitchell Johnson, only for Stuart Clark to step in and prevent further trouble.
Ultimately, though, Ponting was left to reflect on the one that got away. “I’m pretty disappointed we weren’t quite good enough to get over the line at the end,” he said. “We did everything in our power to get those wickets but stumbled at the last hurdle.”
Strauss denies Ashes time-wasting
• ‘If Ricky’s angry, that’s a shame,’ says England captain
• ‘They can play whatever way they want to play,’ says Ponting
Andrew Strauss last night denied his team had contravened the spirit of the game after the Australia captain, Ricky Ponting, accused England of “pretty ordinary” time-wasting tactics in the fraught final stages of the drawn first Test in Cardiff.
England sent on their 12th man, Bilal Shafayat, twice in the space of five minutes – the second time accompanied by their physio, Steve McCaig – as the last pair of Jimmy Anderson and Monty Panesar kept Australia’s bowlers at bay for 69 nerve-racking deliveries, prompting an irritated Ponting to declare the matter would be taken up with the England management.
But Strauss was unrepentant. “There was a lot of confusion to be fair,” he said. “We first sent the 12th man out to let Jimmy and Monty know there was a time issue rather than just overs. And then some drink was spilled on his gloves and, when Jimmy called up to the dressing room, we weren’t sure whether he needed the 12th man or the physio.
“If Ricky’s angry, that’s a shame. I don’t think we were deliberately trying to waste a huge amount of time. They weren’t our tactics, as both of the guys were playing pretty well in the middle. The reality of the situation is that Australia couldn’t take that final wicket and we got away with the draw.”
• Poll: Were England guilty of deliberate time-wasting?
• Mike Selvey: England cannot afford to gloat after draw
• It’s just part of the game, admits Australia’s Hauritz
• Relive the final day with our over-by-over account
Ponting saw the matter differently after his side failed to make the breakthrough that would have given Australia a 1-0 lead in the series going into Thursday’s second Test at Lord’s and a fifth-straight win in the opening match of an Ashes contest. “It was pretty ordinary,” he said of England’s tactics. “They can play whatever way they want to play. We will do everything we can to play by the rules and the spirit of the game. I don’t think it was required. They had changed gloves before, so I’m not sure they were going to be too sweaty after one over. I am not sure what the physio was doing out there. I think a few guys were questioning the umpires. I think a few guys were also questioning the 12th man. I am sure others will be taking it up with the England hierarchy as they should.”
Ponting did, however, play down a potential flashpoint before the start of play when Kevin Pietersen hit a practice ball towards the Australian contingent and was briefly confronted by Mitchell Johnson, only for Stuart Clark to step in and prevent further trouble.
Ultimately, though, Ponting was left to reflect on the one that got away. “I’m pretty disappointed we weren’t quite good enough to get over the line at the end,” he said. “We did everything in our power to get those wickets but stumbled at the last hurdle.”
England tactics frustrate Ponting
Australia captain Ricky Ponting criticised England’s delaying tactics after the hosts clung on for a draw in a thrilling end to the first Test.
England sent their 12th man and physio on to the field in the closing stages in an apparent attempt to waste time.
"I don’t think that was required," said Ponting. "I am not sure what the physio was doing out there – I didn’t see him call for any physio.
"I’m sure others will take it up with the England hierarchy as they should."
With Australia running out of time to claim their final wicket, England sent 12th man Bilal Shafayat down to the playing area to give batsman James Anderson some new gloves.
When he returned with England physio Steve McCaig after the next over they were swiftly ushered off by some angry Australian players.
"He had changed his gloves the over before and his glove is not going to be too sweaty in one over," added Ponting. "But it’s not the reason we didn’t win.
"There would have been a bit of celebrating and jumping up and down in the England room, I’m sure"
Aussie skipper Ricky Ponting
"They can play whatever way they want to play. We have come to play by the rules and the spirit of the game and it is up to them to do what they want to do."
Asked about Ponting’s comments, England captain Andrew Strauss stated: "There was a lot of confusion. We firstly sent the 12th man out to let Jimmy and Monty Panesar know there was time left and not just the overs.
"Then drinks spilt on his glove and Jimmy called up to the dressing room and we weren’t sure whether we needed the 12th man or the physio.
"Our intentions were good so we weren’t deliberately trying to waste a huge amount of time.
"That wasn’t our tactics, those two were playing pretty well so the reality of the situation is Australia didn’t take that final wicket and we got away with a draw.
"I personally thought the game was played in a pretty good spirit the whole way through.
"I didn’t feel there were lines crossed and I think we’d all like it to stay that way."
Ponting admitted his man-of-the-match award, for hitting 150, meant little after his side were held to a draw in a thrilling finale.
"I’d give it back straight away for one more wicket and 20 less runs!" he said.
"We haven’t really done anything wrong and we’ve got a lot to take out of this game. I’m disappointed we didn’t win, I thought we played well enough.
"There are four Tests to go in the series and we will have to play at this level if we want to win."
When Paul Collingwood’s heroic 74 came to an end, there were still more than 40 minutes of the match remaining for England’s final pair of Anderson and Panesar to negotiate.
606: DEBATE"England had a ‘mare and Australia played out of their skins, and yet it was still a draw. "
Moutarde
Ponting offered no excuses and commented: "Our bowlers tried valiantly, right through the game there wasn’t much assistance in the wicket. Everyone tried their hardest but we just came up a little bit short.
"You’ve got to give England some credit for hanging in there and Paul Collingwood for the way he played.
"Losing the toss, it was always going to be really hard to win with the wicket the way it was but we did everything we needed to do to give ourselves a chance and unfortunately we were just that little bit short."
The Australia captain conceded the visiting dressing room was fairly sombre after the match but stressed that the tourists would come back strongly for the second Test at Lord’s on Thursday.
"It’s pretty quiet at the moment and there would have been a bit of celebrating and jumping up and down in the England room, I’m sure," he admitted.
"A lot of our boys will be disappointed for half an hour after the game and then we can reflect and talk about a lot of the good things that we did.
"That’s the important thing, we did so many things really well in this game and we’ve got to take the confidence from that down to Lord’s and make sure we start there on the same note."</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
Clarke & North make England toil
First Ashes Test, Cardiff (day three, stumps):
England 435 v Australia 479-5
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 Oliver Brett
Australia maintained their solid position on day three in Cardiff, leading England by 44 runs with five wickets in hand in the first Test.
Rain knocked 22 overs off the day’s play, leaving the Aussies on 479-5 after an historic late-evening session played under floodlights.
Three wickets did fall in the morning, Australia going to lunch on 348-4 from an overnight position of 249-1.
But Michael Clarke (83) and Marcus North (54) then put on 143 in 42 overs.
The left-handed North batted calmly and patiently on his Ashes debut, and will be there again on Saturday morning after facing 131 balls thus far.
Clarke showed his acumen against spin and was generally unperturbed against the seamers too as he played a more positive role.
TOM FORDYCE BLOGTom reports from Cardiff
But late in the day he was surprised by a Stuart Broad bouncer which he gloved behind as he attempted a pull, leaving him just shy of a first Test century in England in his sixth appearance.
While Friday’s rain was largely unexpected, further heavy showers are forecast from around noon on Saturday – so the odds favour a draw despite Australia’s dominant position.
However England, whose chances of going 1-0 up with four to play appear to have completely evaporated, may yet find themselves battling to avoid defeat on the final day.
Friday dawned brightly in south Wales, with Ricky Ponting and Simon Katich resuming their marathon partnership.
Aussie skipper Ponting soon advanced his score with two boundaries, flogging a Monty Panesar long-hop through the covers and driving a Graeme Swann full toss down the ground.
Katich leant into a cover-drive off Panesar for his first boundary of the morning, and followed up with a square-cut off Swann that sped to the ropes. Australia were quickly re-establishing their dominance.

Nine overs into the day the second new ball became available and the scoring remained rapid, although Ponting had a bit of good fortune when steering an Anderson ball just wide of Kevin Pietersen in the gully at catchable height.
Finally, the stand was ended by James Anderson, Katich falling lbw for 122 to a yorker-length ball from Anderson that actually swung, unlike anything sent down by England on day two. Katich and Ponting had been together for 70 overs, adding 239.
Flintoff was bowling extremely quickly and his bouncers were not played with any ease by either Ponting or the new man Michael Hussey. Ponting top-edged one hook just over Panesar at fine-leg for the first six of the series, though it was a no-ball, and both men received painful blows.
But it was Anderson who picked up the second wicket of the morning, persuading Hussey to drive outside off-stump, the left-hander tickling an easy catch to wicketkeeper Matt Prior.
Skipper Ponting continued to make progress, until Panesar picked up his first Test wicket since the Trinidad Test in March, the slow left-armer’s fifth ball of a new spell providing the biggest prize of the day.
Ponting, on 150, could only get a bottom-edge to crash into his stumps as he attempted a cut shot, and at lunch Australia were still 87 runs behind and perhaps no longer targeting the sort of huge score that had been in their sights at the start of play.
But the session between lunch and tea in this Test has proved a graveyard shift for the bowlers – and so it proved once again with not a wicket to be had. In three days just one man has been dismissed in the middle session – Phillip Hughes on day two.

North got off the mark with a crisp on-drive for four off Broad, who was also cover-driven elegantly by Clarke. Frankly, Broad was not much of a threat but Andrew Strauss persisted with him.
At the other end Panesar had his moments, but Clarke hit him for an effortless straight six, and when Swann came on another fine drive, this time for four, brought Clarke his half-century.
North, patient against the seamers, started to play freely against the spinners and when Clarke pulled Flintoff powerly to the midwicket fence Australia moved into the lead.
At tea the Aussies were sitting very prettily indeed on 458-4, with Clarke on 70 and North on 50, but just three overs and five runs later the rain came down.
It took nearly two hours to get the players back out again, whereupon Clarke punched an exquisite back-foot drive off Flintoff to the extra-cover boundary.
Six overs were played under the Cardiff lights – it was the first time a Test match in Britain had been artificially lit – and while North continued to accumulate tidily, England had the consolation of removing a very dangerous-looking Clarke.
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Australia put England on back foot
England 435; Australia 249-1
Watch highlights of the second day’s play here
Two days gone and already the first Test has not so much twisted and turned as writhed. Today, for the most part anyway, was Australia’s day as relentlessly, playing the conditions without risk or frippery, Simon Katich and Ricky Ponting redressed the balance of the first Test for Australia after a morning in the fieldthat bordered on red-faced embarrassment for them.
Katich, a latecomer as an established Test match batsman, the pragmatic unobtrusive left-hander given the task of helping fill the breach left by one of the great opening pairs in history, became the first to register a century on the newest Test ground when he pulled Andrew Flintoff’s bouncer for a single to fine-leg.
His innings, over four and a half hours, was not chanceless. When he had but 10, he clipped the sharpest of return catches low to Flintoff who, belying his bulk, stooped swiftly and all but collected in his right hand as he followed through from delivery. Then, when 56, a ball from Graeme Swann spun past the inside of his bat and struck him on the back leg. It looked out but Billy Doctrove already appears a committed not-outer; at the other end Aleem Dar has been known to be more benevolent to bowlers.
The Australian captain, though, was merciless and impeccable. A century from him was taken almost as a right and came only a few minutes later, with a single from the penultimate delivery of the day. This was the 38th hundred of a most illustrious and lustrous career, and his eighth against England, in the course of which he became only the fourth batsman to pass 11,000 Test runs. His average of almost 57 is superior to that of Allan Border, Brian Lara and Sachin Tendulkar, who preceded him to the mark, and any other of his contemporaries in the upper echelons of batsmanship.
Tomorrow England must hope for success with the second new ball, available after nine overs, for the Australian team will have dined contentedly last night on the back of these runs, the unbroken second-wicket stand of 189 taking them to 249 for one, with Katich on 104 and Ponting exactly 100. The deficit of 186 offers the most solid of platforms from which to hunt down England’s first-innings 435 and then, perhaps, take a lead from which they, rather than their opponents, can benefit from a wearing pitch.
The England attack today, pace and spin alike, was found wanting, never taken apart but control coming only when Swann sent down four successive maiden overs and Flintoff stampeded in. There was no swing with the new ball for James Anderson, his cutting edge thus removed, and insufficient pace for Stuart Broad to worry top players on a slow surface.
Broad took no further bowling part after limping from the field in the final session for treatment on his right calf, although he did return to the field. Nor was there the predicted bite for the spinners, awaited so eagerly, especially after the Australian off-spinner Nathan Hauritz managed to turn the ball sharply in the morning.
For the first time since assuming the mantle of England’s premier spinner Swann was played with ease if not contempt, any invention or movement nullified by technique and a pitch that, rather than deteriorate as anticipated, was playing as sluggishly as any they endured in the Caribbean or subcontinent during the winter. Neither was Monty Panesar able to make an impression on his return, his pace predictable, and both Katich and Ponting were able to milk him like a Guernsey cow for runs.
Only as the day drew to a close and Anderson returned at the Cathedral Road end for one last tilt did he find any reverse swing and he was able to send a delivery roaring past Katich’s outside edge. But even that was short-lived.
Instead, as has happened too often in the past, there was an expectation and reliance on Flintoff. With hindsight Andrew Strauss might contemplate whether he missed a trick in not giving Flintoff the new ball and challenging him to go round the wicket to Phillip Hughes, who against both Broad and Anderson was able to plant himself on leg stump and flail away through the offside as Katich watched impassively from the other end.
Quite simply he requires no more width than a supermodel does food, but enough is enough. So it took Flintoff’s bullish bowling and personality, and the bounce that remained in a relatively new ball, to dismiss him.
His first over, from round the wicket, was thunderous as he welcomed Hughes to Ashes cricket by belting the middle from the pitch. Hughes looked uncomfortable but it was not until Flintoff opted to go over the wicket that he cracked, flirting crookedly outside off stump to the second ball thus bowled and getting an inside edge that Matt Prior did extremely well to take.
What followed was a total reversal of England’s fortune. There had been a strut to them and the crowd that, in the face of Hauritz finding his spin and some rousing batting from the lower England order, might have led them to expect better progress later on.
For the 75 minutes in which it took Australia to take the last three England wickets they looked an un-Australian rabble, as first Broad and then Swann climbed in while Anderson showed a solid technique a world away from the hapless tailender he once was. Broad was unfortunate to be bowled behind his legs, and Anderson, going for a big shot, was caught at mid-on. But Swann remained undefeated on 47, from only 40 balls with eight fours, three of them in succession from Hauritz. He has now made 141 runs since he was last dismissed in a Test.



