Chitika

Friday, March 28, 2014

The Ashes: 5th Test, day 2

The McGrath Foundation Pink Test.
England won the toss and elected to field first. We lead by 311 runs with 6 wickets in tact, three days play to go.

Australia 1st innings: 326 all out from 76 overs
Steven Smith 115, Brad Haddin 75, Shane Watson 43
Ben Stoked 6-99

England 1st innings: 155 all out from 58.5 overs
Ben Stokes 47
Peter Siddle 3-23, Mitchell Johnson 3-33, Ryan Harris 3-36

Australia 2nd innings: 4/140 off 30.0
Chris Rogers 73*, George Bailey 20*
James Anderson 2-36

Plays: With a lead of 311 and England probably fortunate to have not been bowled out for substantially less, it's looking like the gates are open for us to go in for the kill and finish this Ashes series 5-0.

It took only two deliveries into the morning session to have our second wicket, the big one of Alastair Cook to Ryan Harris, misjudging an attempted LBW. 2-8.

Then James Anderson, who offered some resistance as the night watchman, flashed at a wider delivery and the catch was pouched by Michael Clarke off the bowling of Mitchell Johnson. 3-14.
Mighty Mitch also needs just 1 wicket to level the highest number of wickets taken by an Australian fast bowler in a 5-match Ashes series.

Three runs later England lost Kevin Pietersen, taken down by Ryan Harris with Shane Watson taking a catch from a length ball which jumped a bit on KP. 4-17.

Six runs later Ian Bell - England's real dangerman - was dismissed with a ball that did nip away a touch but with no footwork Bell looked cramped in the shot and England lost their fifth wicket. 5-23.

Some resistance came after the collapse briefly summarised above. It was fortunate for England that Ben Stokes was able to keep going for the sake of them not being bowled out for less than one hundred runs, as he found support from Bairstow and debutant Gary Ballance. Ballance took a ferocious bouncer from Mitchell Johnson into the helmet and didn't seem to fully compose himself thereafter. A tough initiation.

We perhaps played the game a bit too fast paced as Stuart Broad had a bit of a hit out, deciding to go down with a fight this Ashes contest. I would have liked to have seen Michael Clarke just pull the game back a bit and slow down the action, which would have hopefully snuffed England's late innings momentum.
Fortunately, we had them all out for 155 runs and the lead was secured. A healthy lead at that.

England's average 1st innings total this Ashes series has been 194 runs. It tells a tale.

We've also had a pattern throughout this series. If you have been following this Ashes series on the site you will now know of it.

This time around, our top order failed in 2nd innings circumstances where they have prevailed. This final innings of the Ashes series, it went as follows.

David Warner was dismissed for 16 runs, giving him 32 runs for the match.
His Ashes tally though comes in at 523 runs, an average of 58.11. HS 124, x2 50s and x2 100s.

Shane Watson scored 52 runs for the Test, only adding 9 to the scoreboard before edging behind.
He has not finished this Ashes series with enough to make him our definite, nor long term, number 3 solution heading to South Africa. There were glimpses of the talent on display we know Watson possesses. He ends our Ashes campaign with 345 runs at 38.33. HS 103.

Michael Clarke had a quiet SCG Test. He's still piled on the runs this Ashes series, but by his standards of the last 24 months this was very, very reserved on his part. He only scored 16 runs this Test, but brought in a collection of 363 runs, at 40.33. He went beyond a half-century twice and, on both these occasions, advanced to a century. He top scored for us (at present) with 148 runs.

Steven Smith was a centurion in the 1st innings, a wonderful innings to watch which I reported on yesterday. He did his job then for us then and there, helping Brad Haddin initiate a rescue mission. Today he only scored 7 runs. He ends his Ashes series on a high with the bat scoring 327 runs, at 40.87. This includes x2 centuries, a similar trend to Michael Clarke.

Chris Rogers is still at the crease and played with plenty of positive intent towards stumps, instead of going into a sort of lock down mode. He just embraced the moment with a big lead in the bag. I would love to see Bucky score a century in this Test, to just crush any remaining personal doubts he may still harbor.

George Bailey, possibly playing his last Test innings, evidently enjoying himself just found the gaps, worked the ball away, lived on the edge but survived to stumps. He has 20* runs and tomorrow could be a memorable one for him if he just gives hit his best. He has little to lose. He is in our ODI team as a regular member, has now been a member of a winning Ashes campaign, and did manage a half-century in Adelaide.

Sure, he hasn't delivered enough in his personal capacity, but he was involved in the teams win, and here he has a chance to help us advance the lead, ease the pressure off our bowlers, and also maybe give himself a lifeline before the South African tour.

Our bowlers were the victorious ones today and the collection of three wickets to each of our fast bowlers, and a wicket to our spin bowler Nathan Lyon, who really did a fantastic job, just summed up their confidence and ability to work in partnerships.

Verdict: The assessment of our depth is very hard to tell at present looking to the future. Our batting has been frail in the top order, but this cannot overcloud the fact every one in our top order has scored a century and has made an impact on this Ashes series. Consistency is the key. We've seen it with our bowlers, but not with our batsmen. However, when the batsmen have delivered it's been bloody fantastic.

Against South Africa we will need more out of them on the basis of consistency, but the signs are there and fortunately we also have younger men, such as Steven Smith, David Warner and Nathan Lyon, bringing the goods to the level of Test cricket.

The challenges are ahead to not only get back the number 1 spot, but also knowing that inevitably this current line-up is not a long term fixture. It may be enough though to push for this objective of number one status and just help the selectors line up the correct recruitment's going forward. I am staying positive, while embracing the now. We've waited a long time for a performance like this.

Three days to go still, a lead over 300 runs in place, and 6 wickets in tact for us. Plenty to smile about right now and 5-0 definitely awaits us with the right discipline and tactical execution. England have probably checked out. Come on Australia!

Welcome to The Baggy Green Blog!
Thanks for reading this article written by Ian.
To comment on this article, click on the 'Comments' tag at the end of the article.


TWITTER
@BaggyGreenBlog
@Ianbaggygreen
@SylvesterAu
@Dan_StapoARTICLE BY:IanEmail ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to PinterestLabels:Chris Rogers,George Bailey,Mitchell Johnson,The Ashes 2013/14Reactions: No comments:Post a Comment

Newer PostOlder PostHomeSubscribe to:Post Comments (Atom)
We're on Facebook!website tracker




Blog Archive▼ 2014(15) ►  March(4) ►  February(6)▼ January(5)2014 AB Medal & Australia Test Squad analysisWe win the Ashes 5-0The Ashes: 5th Test, day 1Competition time at The Baggy Green Blog #1 ►  2013(85) ►  December(17) ►  November(8) ►  October(2) ►  September(2) ►  August(15) ►  July(15) ►  June(3) ►  May(5) ►  April(3) ►  March(5) ►  February(6) ►  January(4) ►  2012(113) ►  December(5) ►  November(6) ►  October(4) ►  September(7) ►  August(3) ►  July(3) ►  June(5) ►  May(7) ►  April(24) ►  March(16) ►  February(11) ►  January(22) ►  2011(134) ►  December(19) ►  November(14) ►  October(8) ►  September(12) ►  August(15) ►  July(16) ►  June(5) ►  May(3) ►  April(7) ►  March(8) ►  February(11) ►  January(16) ►  2010(238) ►  December(20) ►  November(22) ►  October(18) ►  September(12) ►  August(8) ►  July(36) ►  June(21) ►  May(17) ►  April(11) ►  March(20) ►  February(23) ►  January(30) ►  2009(249) ►  December(22) ►  November(23) ►  October(19) ►  September(16) ►  August(18) ►  July(22) ►  June(18) ►  May(18) ►  April(18) ►  March(20) ►  February(26) ►  January(29) ►  2008(121) ►  December(19) ►  November(10) ►  October(12) ►  September(8) ►  August(8) ►  July(5) ►  June(11) ►  May(6) ►  April(5) ►  March(10) ►  February(19) ►  January(8)EXTRA COVER (LINKS)Reverse Swept Radio (Ian features there)The Baggy Green Book!Official Site of Cricket AustraliaAustralian Cricketers AssociationAnything Cricket (Aus blog)Cricinfo (My key information source)Cricinfo-australiaThe Southernstars (AU Womens Team)LiveSPORT NZ Radio TracksideCricket Champs - Clinics for disabled childrenWaving the flag cricket tours!!The Cricket Magazine (online mag)SportalThesidelineagenda.com - Sports news!Women In CricketPonting FoundationThe Graham Manou FoundationThe McGrath FoundationGreen & Gold Rugby (One for rugga fans)Thoughts from the Dustbin (Aussie cricket thoughts)Planet Cricket (High Quality Articles)Cricket CountrySport Bullet - Get your sport feeds like a bullet!~ Play For Country Not For Self ~Cricket FanCast - Quality site for English SupportersThecricketragicsAfter Grog Blog (Tony's zone)True Allrounder Cricket JournalsCricket With Balls. A very different cricket outlook!The Wicket Post (formerly Poshins World)Cricket GamesThe Public Apology - Random Aussie Blog on sport99.94 Cricket OpinionsBlog It For SixSnicked CricketThe Cricketer (An Indian Supporters thoughts)Chris Stocks' English Extra Cover BlogCricket Tragic! (focused on old school cricket)Subscribe Now Fanatics!Posts Atom PostsComments Atom CommentsFollowers of the ChirpsTags2007 World Cup(2)2011 Statistics article(1)2011 World Cup(15)2012/13 Statistics article(1)2015 World Cup(1)40 over cricket(1)Aaron Finch(14)ACA Survey(1)Adam Gilchrist(14)Adam Voges(7)Adelaide Oval(8)Alex Doolan(3)Ali de Winter(2)Allan Border(6)Allan Border Medal Awards(10)Andrew MacDonald(10)Andrew Symonds(15)Andy Bichel(2)Anil Kumble(1)Argus Review(2)Ashton Agar(6)Australia(8)australia state wrap up(1)Australian contract players(7)Australian Cricketers Association(3)Australian ODI future(1)Australian U/19's(4)Backyard cricket(1)Baggy Green(10)Baggy Green comic(1)Bellerive Oval(1)Ben Cutting(1)Ben Hilfenhaus(83)Ben Laughlin(1)Book Review(8)Border-Gavaskar Trophy(31)Brad Haddin(82)Brad Hodge(14)Brad Hogg(10)Brett Geeves(4)Brett Lee(51)Brian Lara(8)Bryce McGain(1)Callum Ferguson(47)Cameron Bancroft(1)Cameron White(37)Chapal Series(2)Chappell-Hadlee Trophy(8)Chris Rogers(27)Clint McKay(12)competition(1)Courtley Ambrose(2)Craig McDermott(5)Cricket Australia(13)cricket bat manufacturing(1)Cricket Memorabilia(1)Cricketchamps.org.au(4)Cricscene(3)Dan Christian(13)Dan Harris(2)Darren Bravo(2)Darren Lehmann(8)David Boon(2)David Hussey(35)David Warner(84)Dirk Nannes(10)Doug Bollinger(46)DRS(7)Ed Cowan(24)Facebook(4)Fielke Cricket Bats(1)Frank-Worrell Trophy(19)George Bailey(17)Glen McGrath(11)Glenn Maxwell(5)Graham Manou(7)Greg Blewett(2)Ian Healy(3)ICC(8)ICC awards(6)ICC Champions Trophy(15)ICC rankings(2)ICC World T20 2012(9)India ODI series(4)IPL(17)Jackson Bird(6)James Anderson(2)James Faulkner(7)James Hopes(19)James Pattinson(18)Jason Krejza(11)John Hastings(7)John Inverarity(1)Josh Hazelwood(5)Justin Langer(9)KFC big Bash(10)Leadership(1)Lords Cricket Ground(1)Luke Butterworth(1)Luke Ronchi(5)Luke Sparrow Gillian(3)Marcus North(34)Mark Cosgrove(1)match-fixing(2)Matthew Hayden(16)Matthew Wade(27)Melbourne Cricket Ground(1)Michael Beer(5)Michael Bevan(5)Michael Clarke(156)Michael Hill(2)Michael Hussey(123)Michael Klinger(7)Michael Slater(4)Mickey Arthur(4)Mitchell Johnson(124)Mitchell Marsh(5)Mitchell Starc(14)Moises Henriques(4)Nathan Bracken(10)Nathan Hauritz(41)Nathan Lyon(29)New South Wales Blues(1)NNSP(4)Northcott's(1)NSP(31)Overkill cricket(7)Pakistan(15)Pat Howard(2)Patrick Cummins(15)Peter Forrest(4)Peter George(6)Peter Siddle(64)Phil Jaques(4)Phillip Hughes(68)Pocket Cricket(4)Podcast(5)Post A Comment(1)Queensland Bulls(3)Referral System(5)Ricky Ponting(135)Rob Quiney(3)Rotation Policy(1)Rule Changes(1)Ryan Harris(75)Sachin Tendulkar(6)Shane Warne(17)Shane Watson(140)Shaun Marsh(30)Shaun Tait(24)Sheffield Shield(3)Simon Katich(53)Sir Donald Bradman(4)Sledging(1)South Australian Redbacks(11)Southern Stars(9)Split-innings(2)Sri-Lankan Series 2012(1)Sri-Lankan Tour 2011(9)Steve Bucknor(3)Steve Waugh(15)Steven O'Keefe(5)Steven Smith(54)Stuart Clark(14)Sydney Cricket Ground(1)T20 Champions Trophy 2009(15)T20 Champions Trophy 2010(17)Tasmanian Tigers(2)The Ashes(41)The Ashes 2013(30)The Ashes 2013/14(27)The Ashes notes(23)The Ashes notes 2010/11(29)The Ashes notes 2013(1)The Baggy Green(22)The Baggy Green Book(1)The Baggy Green Forum(2)The Baggy Green Reader Awards(5)The England ODI Series(29)The Gabba(1)The Hate Club(1)The McGrath Foundation(3)The Ponting Era(1)The Proteas ODI series(10)The Proteas Test Series '09(13)The Proteas Test Series '12(5)The Proteas Test series '14(9)The Proteas Tour '11(19)The Proteas Tour '14(1)The Psychology of Cricket(1)The Streak(1)The Victorian Bushfires(1)Tim Nielson(4)Tim Paine(49)Tom Moody(1)Tony Greig(1)Travis Birt(3)Travis Head(1)Trent Copeland(11)Twenty20(4)Twitter(2)UAE tour(2)Usman Khawaja(18)Victorian Bushrangers(6)Video(2)WACA(1)Waqar Younis(1)West Indies(3)West Indies Series(31)Western Warriors(2)Will Bosisto(1)World Cup Cricket(1)Xavier Doherty(17)All articles written by The Baggy Green Blogsite contributors. ©Images/Sources are acknowledged. Simple template. Powered by Blogger.

View the Original article

No comments:

Post a Comment