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Showing posts with label PERTH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PERTH. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

The Top Spin Ashes awards

And so, in the end, all it took to wipe away 20 years of miserable tours Down Under was seven weeks of high-octane, highly disciplined cricket from the most ruthless England side in living memory. It was a pleasure to be there and it is a privilege to hand out the following Ashes gongs, all of which are currently in the post…

All three of the players damned in advance by Australia – Alastair Cook, Ian Bell and Jimmy Anderson – performed as if their parts in the 5-0 drubbing four years earlier had been taken by lookalikes. But it was Bell who wrought the most complete transformation, moving from Sherminator to Braveheart during the course of a series in which he twinkled like the star he has always promised to be. More than anyone, Bell personifies the extra layer of toughness added by Andy Flower since 51 all out and all that.

You had to feel for Michael Clarke. Handed a flush that was not so much busted as non-existent, he was duly obliged to face the press and explain away the ills of Australian cricket, sport, society and culture. He did his bit gamely (although, if there's any justice, 2010-11 will go down as Ricky Ponting's third Ashes defeat). But he was not helped by a staggering show of complacency from Andrew Hilditch, the Australian chairman of selectors. Hilditch was, he said, very happy with his work – which may leave Aussie fans wondering what would have happened if he'd not been on top of his game.

Australia won at Perth because of a wind-assisted spell of bowling from Mitchell Johnson (and if you don't believe that, ask yourself why he didn't swing the ball one iota in the three Tests he played at the enclosed stadiums of Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney). When they got on top of England, they started sledging, with Ponting losing his dignity completely by screaming at Matt Prior after he was dismissed. Yet we were told the victory was connected to the aggression. As analysis went, it wasn't merely childish – it was utterly desperate.

The Barmy Army were a phenomenon in their own right, especially when their chants were rebounding around the Gabba, the MCG and the SCG. Some of it was spine-tingling. But their baiting of Johnson went too far as the players stood around for the Sydney presentation ceremony. It was like Ponting and Prior in Perth. 
The game was over, guys. No need to kick a man when he's down, however pleased you were to find a rude word that rhymed with 'right'.

At Brisbane, Jimmy Anderson dropped a skyer over his shoulder. At Perth, Graeme Swann put down a half-chance at short extra cover. At Sydney, Bell spilled a tougher one in the same position. Prior may have grassed a couple of reflex grabs. But apart from that, it's hard to recall a serious blemish in the field all series. This may well have been the most complete fielding performance by an England side in the history of the game. And for that, the fielding coach Richard Halsall deserves a massive baseball mitt on the back.

I know, I know – journalists are always going to grumble when they're fed crumbs rather than three-course feasts. But there was something Jardine-like in Andrew Strauss's refusal to comment on the Australians at any stage of the series, save for a brief jibe at Phil Hughes. 
The plan made complete sense: starve the local press of headlines and you'll avoid the age-old ready-made pep talk for the opposition's dressing-room noticeboard.
But this impressively tedious tactic only worked because England were winning. When they tried it four years ago, they just looked stupid.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Ashes series : Key moments

Key moments in the 2010/11 Ashes series between Australia and England after the tourists won the fourth Test at the MCG to take a 2-1 lead and retain the famous urn on Wednesday. 

FIRST TEST, BRISBANE, November 25-29 

Day 1: England captain Andrew Strauss wins the toss and bats first, losing his wicket after just three balls and setting the tone for an Australia dominated day in which Peter Siddle takes a hat-trick and the tourists are bowled out for 260. The hosts finish 25/0. 

Day 2: Australia slump to 143/5 before being rescued by Mike Hussey (81 not out) and Brad Haddin (22 not out) to close on 220/5. 

Day 3: Hussey and Haddin complete centuries and pile on 307 runs for the sixth wicket. The hosts are dismissed for 481 with Hussey falling just five runs short of his first Test double century. England close on 19/0. 

Day 4: England's openers Strauss and Alastair Cook put on 188 runs and then Cook combines with Jonathan Trott to lead England to 309/1 at the close. 

Day 5: England amass 517 runs, Cook and Trott's unbeaten partnership of 329 runs the highest by English batsmen in a Test in Australia, before declaring and bowling 26 overs at the hosts who finish 107/1. 

Result: Match drawn. 

SECOND TEST, ADELAIDE, December 3-7 

Day 1: Australia captain Ricky Ponting wins the toss and opts to bat, his team starting in disastrous fashion by losing their first three wickets for two runs, which they never recover from on their way to 245 all out. Hussey top scores with 93. England close on 1/0. 

Day 2: Strauss is bowled on the third ball of the day but Cook (136 not out) steers England to 317/2 at the close after sharing in a 173-run partnership with Trott (78). 

Day 3: Cook goes early on for 148 but Kevin Pietersen finishes 213 not out to have the tourists 551/4 at stumps. 

Day 4: England declare on 620/5 before lunch, a first innings lead of 375, and by the close have reduced Australia to 238/4. 

Day 5: With heavy rain forecast in the afternoon, spinner Graeme Swann claims five wickets as Australia are bowled out before lunch for 304 to put England one up. 

Result: England won by an innings and 71 runs. 

THIRD TEST, PERTH, December 16-20 

Day 1: England start brightly having won the toss and electing to bowl, Australia's top order blown away to leave them 65/4 at lunch. Bowler Mitchell Johnson top scores with 62 late on as the hosts are dismissed for 268. England close on 29/0. 

Day 2: Johnson rediscovers his bowling rhythm taking 6/38 to blow away England for just 187. Australia finish the day well on top, 119/3. 

Day 3: Hussey (116) and opener Shane Watson (95) guide Australia to 309 all out, leaving England 391 runs to win the match and retain the Ashes. The tourists close on 81/5, Johnson and Ryan Harris with two wickets apiece. 

Day 4: Australia waste no time in cleaning up England for 123 in just 37 overs, Harris claiming 6/47 to level the series. 

Result: Australia won by 267 runs. 

FOURTH TEST, MELBOURNE, December 26-30 

Day 1: In front of nearly 90,000 fans, Australia subside to 98 all out after Strauss puts the hosts into bat, opening bowlers James Anderson and Chris Tremlett with four wickets each. England finish on 157/0. 

Day 2: Trott comes to the crease early but bats the entire day to finish 141 not out and lead England, with the help of Matt Prior (75 not out), to 444/5 at stumps. 

Day 3: England are dismissed quickly for 513 and have to bide their time for a breakthrough but after opener Philip Hughes is run out for 23 with the score at 53, the wickets begin to come and Australia are 169/6 at the close. 

Day 4: Mitchell Johnson (6) falls early to Tremlett but Haddin (55 not out) and Siddle (40) extended the rearguard action. Swann dismissed Siddle and Bresnan got Hilfenhaus caught behind. Harris, who had a stress fracture of his left ankle, did not bat so Australia were out for 258 and England retained the Ashes. 

Result: England won by an innings and 157 runs. 

The fifth Test of the series is to be played in Sydney from January 3-7, 2011.

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