Australia’s captain taunted by England’s Barmy Army for his hasty reviews during day four’s fine advert for pink-ball Test cricketThe twilight zone. Though 24 hours later than many expected, England got their moment under lights on the fourth evening in Adelaide and through Joe Root, Dawid Malan and some pyromaniacal reviews by Steve Smith, somehow the tourists remained in the hunt.Whatever the result on the final day, this was the kind of session for which day-night Test cricket was designed. A hooping pink ball, a straining attack and batsmen battling hard to get just shy of halfway in their pursuit of 354 – Ashes cricket might not need the format to sell out grounds but the glow of the outfield, the...
The batsman thought his Test career might be over, but his century at Adelaide was perfectly judged and has put Australia in position to win the series“You beauty!” It did not require sophisticated lip-reading skills to understand Shaun Marsh when charging down the pitch in response to reaching three figures. Simple words from a straightforward character, coated with very real emotion from the most maligned player of his generation.Marsh’s inclusion in this side could never be divorced from the fact that it is his eighth chance to prevail in the baggy green across seven years. But that charmed run looked to be over after Australia’s tour of India in March. Then, he lost both his place and national contract before...
England have won in Australia before without express bowlers, but on the surfaces witnessed so far, it is starting to look like the missing elementThe history of English cricket is littered with moments in the field when, almost to the imagined sound of Herb Alpert tootling out Spanish Flea on his trumpet, the car has shipped many of its constituent parts and is careering downhill at a pace.On the second day at the Adelaide Oval, one that was dominated by Shaun Marsh’s maiden Ashes hundred and capped off by Mitchell Starc’s pinpoint location of Mark Stoneman’s front pad before the rain, the latest such entry came moments from dinner amid a chorus of local derision. Related: England face an Ashes...
England deliver new hard-nosed, opening day response to Australia sledging, but umpire Aleem Dar issues a warningDifferent coloured ball, same old nonsense. The 2017-18 Ashes may have witnessed less than a week of cricket but when it comes to behaviour, the latest battle for the little urn is already shaping up as a race to the bottom.The opening day in Adelaide, where a record-breaking 55,317 spectators flocked through the turnstiles for the first day-night men’s Test between Australia and England, should have been a celebration of the oldest rivalry in cricket getting a fresh twist under lights. Instead, it was a case of rinse and repeat from the back end of the Gabba Test and the fallout caused by the...
The Australia No3 looked destined for another day-night century at Adelaide after riding his luck but his dismissal gave England a chink of light in the darkThese were meant to be words about an Usman Khawaja century as he finally set straight seven years of Ashes false starts in conditions where he has excelled, a century where the No3 replicated the poise and control that underpinned his masterful ton at the same venue 12 months ago to make Joe Root’s decision to put Australia in look disastrous.Instead, his dismissal four balls after the dinner interval exposed the hosts’ collapsible middle order at the most dangerous time in day-night matches as artificial light took over and the wicket’s additional grass stood...