пятница, 31 декабря 2010 г.

How Ashes hero Tiny Tim Bresnan (aged 9½) proved a big hit at Headingley | Mail Online

The spectators on Headingley’s famous Western Terrace were, most unusually,

gobsmacked.

Down on the pitch, during an interval in the 1994 England Test against South Africa, a nine-year-old lad was distracting them from the serious business of downing a few restorative lunchtime pints.

They were not to know it, but playing‘Kwik Cricket’ in front of them using a plastic bat and stumps, was a future Ashes hero by the name of Tim Bresnan.

‘He was playing with his brother Nicholas, and they were running in and bouncing each other, or smashing the ball into the crowd,’ recalls Andrew Bourke.

‘It was such an extraordinary display that it had the whole Terrace transfixed, these

two young boys going at each other. Some of us went over just to take a look.’ 

Hero: Tim Bresnan salutes getting Ben Hilfenhaus' wicket to seal the fourth Test win

Hero: Tim Bresnan salutes getting Ben Hilfenhaus' wicket to seal the fourth Test win

Bourke, now first-team captain at Bresnan’s main club Castleford, was at Yorkshire’s academy back then and had been bowling in the nets at Hansie Cronje and Co, but that is what he remembers about the day. Now he is just one of the tight-knit cricket

community in an area of the county best known for rugby league, who is looking on proudly at the impact one of their own has made.

The well of talent that is Yorkshire’s traditional league cricket appears to have sprung

another star, one who seamlessly joined the England team at the MCG and, despite the pressure, played a major part in securing the urn until 2013.

To those who have known him a long time it came as little surprise that he has coped, or that his youthful ability has reached a much wider audience.

Anyone who has played cricket around Castleford knows the Bresnans, who are stalwarts at Townville CC, a smaller club born from a working men’s institute on the outskirts of this league stronghold.

Fresh faced: The Ashes star as a Yorkshire U15 player

Fresh faced: The Ashes star as a Yorkshire U15 player

Tim’s father Raymond, a skilled tradesman at a local glassworks, played there, and his three sons followed him. The three brothers of mum Julie, who has helped out with the teas there for years, also turned out for Townville.

‘He started playing for our under 13s when he was about 10, and while his brothers are good players, Tim was always head and shoulders above everyone else,’ says the club’s secretary David Booth.

‘If he didn’t get runs, he would always get wickets. The county spotted him young and he moved on to Castleford because they were in the main county league and they wanted him playing at that level.

‘We’re very proud of him and he came back to play for us against Batley two summers

ago, scoring 148 and taking eight wickets. He was always a popular and confident lad, nothing ever seemed to faze him, so I wasn’t surprised he came in and did so well in Melbourne.’

By 13, Bresnan was in Castleford’s adult second team and gained local notoriety when, in four consecutive matches, he took a wicket with his first ball when opening the bowling.

Another of the club’s old boys, Chris Silverwood, was soon to play for England and Bresnan looked likely to follow him when he was picked for the national Under 15 side, and then became the youngest player to play for Yorkshire in 20 years when he made the first team at 16.

Flying high: Tim Bresnan and girlfriend Hannah go ballooning

Flying high: Tim Bresnan and girlfriendHannah go ballooning

For many prodigious teenage talents in all sports, it can take a while to recognise what is required to make it at the game’s most rarefied level.

Bresnan, like his early admirers on the Western Terrace, may have been a little too fond of a pie and a pint in the‘old school’ environment that once prevailed in county cricket.

Martyn Moxon, the respected former England opener who is his head coach at Yorkshire, believes there were other factors as well.

‘I think he suffered early in his career from being used as a bit of a workhorse, even though he was young. Physically he was able to do it because of his strength and so he bowled a lot of overs, which perhaps wasn’t a great thing for his development,’ says Moxon.

Back in the day: Bresnan's former cricket club Townville, in Castleford, West Yorkshire

Back in the day: Bresnan's former cricket club Townville, in Castleford, West Yorkshire

‘When I came back to the club four years ago, he already had a lot of experience. His talent is obvious, so I felt with him it was a question of how good he really wanted to be himself.

‘He was easily capable of making a good living from county cricket but he needed to realise that it wasn’t just going to happen at international level. He has developed this hunger to play for England and has really bought into the fitness thing in the past couple of years. He is bowling from close to the stumps and that is helping his ability to swing it both ways.

‘Tim’s a smashing lad and very down to earth. Being an all-rounder at international level is very hard, but I don’t see any reason why he can’t establish himself as that.’

 


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четверг, 30 декабря 2010 г.

ASHES 2010: Jonathan Trott moves up to third in Test rankings after his England's Ashes heroics | Mail Online

England batsman Jonathan Trott has climbed to third in the ICC Test rankings on the back of his unbeaten century in the fourth Ashes Test.

Trott hit a 168 not out as the tourists sealed an innings and 157 runs victory over Australia to retain the Ashes.

Trott is now just nine ratings points behind second-place Sachin Tendulkar of India.

He could move above him depending on how he fares in the final Ashes Test and Tendulkar in India's Test with South Africa. Kumar Sangakkara continues to top the rankings.

Alastair Cook has moved up one place to 13th and Kevin Pietersen up four to 21st.

Australia's top-order batsmen have taken a dive in the rankings.

Mike Hussey has dropped four places to share 10th position with Sri Lanka's Thilan Samaraweera, Shane Watson has fallen two places to 15th, Michael Clarke has slipped three places to 24th and Ricky Ponting has dropped to 29th place, one behind England captain Andrew Strauss.

In the bowling rankings, Peter Siddle was rewarded for his six for 75 in Melbourne with a jump of six places to 11th.

 




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среда, 29 декабря 2010 г.

ASHES 2010: Graeme Swann hails amazing series after England's triumph | Mail Online

England spinner Graeme Swann heralded an 'amazing series' after England retained the Ashes in Melbourne.

Swann took one of the three wickets needed to wrap up a first successful series in Australia for 24 years, as England recorded a crushing innings win at the MCG.

Chris Tremlett snared Mitchell Johnson, Swann had Peter Siddle caught in the deep and Tim Bresnan took the historic wicket of Ben Hilfenhaus to kickstart the celebrations.

Happy days: Graeme Swann celebrates on a lap of honour

Happy days: Graeme Swann celebrates on a lap of honour

'It's been an amazing series,' Swann told Sky. 'It's fluctuated so wildly. After the hammering we got in Perth it took a mammoth effort to come back.

'I think the difference to me is we had a few more guys in good nick with bat and ball. They have some unbelievable players but Ricky Ponting has not had a good score, how we've managed that I'll never know and he's one of the best players going.

'I was hoping I'd take the last wicket, but it's fitting that 'Bres' got it. I'm over the moon. I said before I wouldn't bother if I didn't take a wicket in the series as long as we won it.'

Bresnan, for whom the Test marked his first of the tour, admitted: 'It's an unbelievable feeling. I think we'll have a few decent days of celebrations now.

'The bowlers worked in partnerships and created pressure and that became wickets.'

Victory: England's team celebrate their Melbourne win

Victory: England's team celebrate their Melbourne win

Batsman Ian Bell admitted the win will take some time to sink in in the England dressing room.

'This is one of the best moments,' he said. 'Winning at the MCG in the Boxing Day Test, especially after this performance, it's fantastic.

'We're a bit gobsmacked. The performances we've done out here have been fantastic since we've arrived.

'To retain the Ashes, we've worked very hard for this. Now we have to prepare for Sydney and we hope to end the series on a high. We want to put in a good performance in Sydney.

'At times Australia have shown they're a good side but we've also played some good cricket. Our batting, bowling and fielding has been fantastic and it's good we've been able to play consistent cricket for some time now.'

 


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вторник, 28 декабря 2010 г.

Paul Newman: Tim Bresnan blows away the doubters in Melbourne | Mail Online

It says everything about the meticulous planning and thoroughness of this England regime that Tim Bresnan should be the man who stood up when one more hero was needed for them to retain the Ashes.

The Yorkshireman has long had to contend with accusations that he is more of a bits and pieces player or perhaps a one-day specialist rather than a genuine front-line performer in a Test attack. No-one is doubting him now.

It was always going to be tougher for England to dismiss Australia second time round at the MCG, not least because the Melbourne wicket had flattened out to the point where it was close to perfect for batting on the third day.

No matter. England seem to have a man, and a skill, for all occasions these days and after the home side had made a decent start when faced with a mountain of a deficit they turned to the Pontefract yeoman to try to reverse swing the ball, the quality that he was preferred to Steven Finn for in this Test.

It worked like a dream. Up until thatstage, just after tea, the only breakthrough England had made as they defended their monster lead of 415 was when Shane Watson ran out his opening partner for the second time in this series– Phil Hughes being the victim this time rather than Simon Katich– with Jonathan Trott again being the sharp fielder in the covers. Then enter Bresnan.

Reverse swing can only be gained whenthe ball is kept very dry and when the surface is abrasive but David Saker, the England bowling coach who was once the coach of Victoria, knew that this very modern skill could be gained at the MCG and that Bresnan was the main man among the English seamers who could produce it.

The end? Ricky Ponting was sent packing for perhaps the final time

The end? Ricky Ponting was sent packing for perhaps the final time

No praise is high enough for England.They could only add another 69 this morning for the loss of their last five wickets, Jonathan Trott finishing unbeaten on 168, but that took them to 513 and they knew that they had more than two and a half days tobowl Australia out again, flat wicket or not.

Poor old Hughes was finally looking as though he could hang around for a while when Watson, the most unreliable of runners, called him for a suicidal single and saw Trott’s throw expertly collected in front of the stumps by Matt Prior, who whipped off the bails in a very modern way to leave Hughes a fraction short of his ground.

Gottim: Tim Bresnan celebrates the wicket of run machine Michael Hussey

Gottim: Tim Bresnan celebrates the wicket of run machine Michael Hussey

And so it was that Bresnan, the fifthchoice England seamer at the start of this tour, stepped up in the biggest match of his life to take the wickets of Shane Watson, Ricky Ponting and Mike Hussey to leave England on the brink of their second innings victory in this tumultuous series.

Key wicket: Graeme Swann got Michael Clarke out

Key wicket: Graeme Swann got Michael Clarke out

The make-up of the third day rapidlychanged. From an attacking start Watson and Ponting, who began the dayremarkably trying to defend himself over his show of dissent yesterday,retreated into their shells, just doing anything they could to keepEngland out.

They made a pretty good job of it until, with Alastair Cook and Jimmy Anderson seeming to act as principal ball polishers at mid-on and mid-off, Bresnan made his critical intervention.

Watson, the half century maker who will never be a proper opener until he starts converting his starts into hundreds, played no stroke to one that nipped back and was lbw.

Ponting, who must now be thinking that his days as Australian captain are numbered, got an inside edge to one that kept a little low and was bowled and then Hussey, whose prolific run in this series has come to a shuddering halt in this fourth Test, chipped Bresnan tamely into the covers.

If Ponting really is going to sacked or resign then Michael Clarke seems to be the only viable candidate to replace him and, in his current form, that will not exactly inspire confidence among home supporters.

Here the man who has been such a good player of spin over the years was hesitant and nervous, being reprieved on two when Matt Prior made his first mistake and fumbled a routine stumping before Graeme Swann finally got him caught in the gully when he came round the wicket.

Steve Smith clumped a few in his unorthodox way but when Jimmy Anderson had him bowled off an under-edge trying yet another pull it really was all over bar the shouting.

All is needed are the finishing touches tomorrow and then the Ashes will be retained with a Test to play.

And that is a lovely achievement to contemplate.

 


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понедельник, 27 декабря 2010 г.

ASHES 2010: Jonathan Trott insists Ricky Ponting was wrong to challenge umpire over Pietersen decision | Mail Online

Jonathan Trott does not believe Ricky Ponting had a good case for questioning the not out verdict against Kevin Pietersen which led to an unseemly incident between the home captain and umpire Aleem Dar.

England's batsmen dominated day two following their memorable Boxing Day bowling performance, Trott making an unbeaten 141 alongside half-centuries from Matt Prior (75no) and Pietersen (51).

Can't you put this right? Ricky Ponting pleads with umpire Anthony Hill

Can't you put this right? Ricky Ponting pleads with umpire Anthony Hill

That saw them to 444 for a five - a lead of 346 - but Ponting's lengthy verbal spat with the match officials dominated the post-match debate.

Wicketkeeper Brad Haddin thought Pietersen had edged behind, leading to a not out verdict by Dar which was upheld on review by TV umpire Marais Erasmus.

Ponting reacted furiously, but non-striker Trott believes the decision was correct.

'I didn't think there was anything there,' said Trott.

Gee that hurts: Jonathan Trott hit a hundred while Ricky Ponting raged

Gee that hurts: Jonathan Trott hit a hundred while Ricky Ponting raged

'I don't know if it (Pietersen's bat) came off the pad or not, I'm not quite sure what the noise was.

'I didn't see much (of Ponting's reaction), I was just chatting to Kev the whole time. Of course they wanted the decision to go their way, but that's cricket.

'I think the review system is there to correct mistakes and it's pretty spot-on at the moment.'

Trott was the non-striker during the controversial altercation - but could shed no significant light on what happened.

Who are you looking at? Ricky Ponting has words with Kevin Pietersen

Who are you looking at? Ricky Ponting has words with Kevin Pietersen

'I don't really know much about what was going on,' he said, explaining he and his partner were away from the action when Ponting was addressing the umpires.

'I was speaking to KP the whole time, so I didn't see any chatting or altercation really.

'I saw him {Ponting} chatting but I'm not sure what about.'

Trott was able to confirm Pietersen was always convinced he would not be given out.

'He didn't think he hit it. I didn't really see the replay either, so it's hard for me to say what happened.'

 




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вторник, 7 декабря 2010 г.

THE ASHES 2010: Adelaide thunderstorm too late to save Australia | Mail Online

Didn't England cricket fans used to complain that their team was unlucky?

Mind you, didn't the Australians used to be world beaters? How times are changing.

This came too late for Australia: Lighting breaks behind the Adelaide Oval on Tuesday afternoon

This came too late for Australia: Lighting breaks behind the Adelaide Oval on Tuesday afternoon

The talk in Adelaide has been all about the weather. Newspapers Down Under were urging Australians to do a rain dance before the final day of the second Test, and English eyes were looking nervously to the skies.

The rains did come as promised, and by golly did it come down in spades. In fact, an extraordinary thunderstorm broke across the city. Thankfully for all Englishmen, it came two hours late to save Australia.

They couldn't have played in that: The field is covered with water just hours after England's triumph

They couldn't have played in that: The field is covered with water just hours after England's triumph

Graeme Swann inspired England to a memorable victory before lunch on the final day, putting them 1-0 up in the Ashes series.

And then, at 2.05pm local time, the heavens opened. The Adelaide Oval was deluged. There was thunder and lightning. Some locals described the thunderstorm as 'biblical'.

They timed it well: Graeme Swann celebrates after dismissing Peter Siddle to clinch victory

They timed it well: Graeme Swann celebrates after dismissing Peter Siddle to clinch victory

Celebrating England fans weren't bothered. They gathered in pubs across town to watch the storm, while they toasted success. It must have made victory seem even sweeter.

As one of England's victorious team Ian Bell said: 'It can rain as much as it wants now.'

 


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понедельник, 6 декабря 2010 г.

ASHES 2010: The making of England's future... Captain Cook! How Alastair went from choirboy to Aussie-basher | Mail Online

Any English cricket lover attending one of the five services being held at St Paul's Cathedral on Sunday might have been tempted to offer up a silent prayer of thanks for one of its most illustrious old boys.

For five years, Alastair Cook performed in the famous choirstalls, and the acute sense of discipline that was required has permeated through to the phenomenal efforts of concentration that have been breaking Australia's will in the Ashes.

That is the view of his father Graham, who has been in Adelaide to witness Cook's latest heroics, and the connection is also made by his first cricket coach at St Paul's Cathedral School, which England's opener attended as a boarder from the age of eight.

Tim Roslin, the school's former games master who now lives in Sydney, feels that the habits absorbed as a highly trained chorister can only have helped.

So, perhaps, does the sense of self-sufficiency bred by moving from the Essex countryside to boarding in the heart of London at such a young age.

'There's no doubt that it was a highly disciplined environment and it needed to be, because the boys would be up at 6am every morning to practise their singing and only had one day off per week,' recalls Roslin, whose sister Gaby is the well-known television presenter.

'Although singing was the focus of the school there were lots of other things going on. I never had a problem getting the boys to play cricket, although sometimes the people running the choir weren't always so happy.'

Child's play: Left-hander Cook was always a natural cricketer

Child's play: Left-hander Cook was always a natural cricketer

Cook was very much his star pupil.'We actually had a few good players but he was miles ahead of anyone,'Roslin told Sportsmail. 'I remember saying to his father that there wasno doubt he would play professional cricket, although you couldn't knowabout England.'

Singingwas the main business and for the young Cook there were tours toHolland and Brazil, a solo on a St Paul's CD and even an appearancewith Dame Kiri Te Kanawa. His favourite time of the week, however,involved cricket. 'Our school matches were held on these very basicpitches up at Regent's Park and I can only remember three occasionswhen he failed. He would get at least 50 nearly every time.

Choirboy: A young Cook at St Paul's Cathedral school

Choirboy: A young Cook at St Paul's Cathedral school

Another fine partnership: Cook (left) enjoys schoolboy success

Schoolboy success: Cook (left)

'Ithas been fascinating to follow his career since because the same thingsare there now that were there then: he was always a great cutter andpuller, he had amazing concentration and an absolute love for the game.

'There was a place at the school called the Jungle Room where they could watch TV and whenever the cricket was on you knew he would be in there. Alastair was a very level-headed boy, perhaps slightly introverted.'

It was ostensibly for his singing and clarinet-playing that Cook gained a scholarship to Bedford School, with there being an element of the music serving as a means to an end. Conveniently the school has always been strong in cricket, the area that was now becoming his focus. Former Durham captain Will Smith was among his contemporaries there, as was Alex Wakeley of Northants, but it is Cook who was most prolific.

Hitting the right notes: Cook (right) gained a scholarship to Bedford School thanks to his clarinet playing

Hitting the right notes: Cook (right) gained a scholarship to Bedford School thanks to his clarinet playing

Summoned as a 14-year-old to play for the MCC, who had turned up a man short, against the 1st XI, he made a hundred, the first of 19 at the school. In his final year he scored more than 1,200 runs and averaged 160.

The Ashes 200 club in Oz

Kevin Pietersen

Date................ Dec 2010

Score.........213 not out

Alastair Cook

Date.............Nov 2010

Score.....235 not out

Paul Collingwood

Date...........Dec 2006

Score...................206

Wally Hammond

Date..... Dec 1928 (2),

Dec 1936

Scores......251, 200, 231 not out

Reginald‘Tip’ Foster

Date... Dec 1903

Score.......... 287

Again, discipline and a mostun-teenager-like willingness to suffer early starts were an aid.Despite his musical commitments he would swim length after length twicea week at 7am, or get up and go for a run on other days.

Although Cook is not a silky athlete, the Australian bowlers will testify to his on-going powers of endurance. Bedford's master in charge of cricket is Peter Sherwin, ironically an Australian who played grade cricket against the likes of Ricky Ponting and Glenn McGrath.

'The boys here are really buzzing with what Alastair has been doing,' he said. In his latter years at school Cook was helped by its head cricket professional and ex-England player, Derek Randall.

'You could see as soon as you saw him batting, and how quickly he saw the ball, that he was a natural,' said Randall. 'He was never one of those flamboyant players. Allowing him to play one-day cricket has been important. Whereas earlier on he'd be batting all day and get to a hundred, now he can take the game to the bowlers a lot more.'

By the time Cook left he was well ensconced in the Essex county set-up. Now the England captaincy beckons, and records set by the likes of Tendulkar and Bradman are under threat.

 



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воскресенье, 5 декабря 2010 г.

THE ASHES 2010: Kevin Pietersen back to his brilliant best as Australia wilt | Mail Online

This was England’s fifth dominant day in a row in this Ashes series– and possibly the most significant of the lot.

Not only did Kevin Pietersen reassert himself on the international stage with a double-century straight out of his heyday, but Australia’s Plan B of Ryan Harris and Doug Bollinger was shown to be only marginally less toothless than the Plan A of Ben Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson. We await Plan C with trepidation.

Chuck together England’s second innings at Brisbane and their first innings– thus far– here, and they have gathered 1,067 runs for the loss of five wickets. Never before have they passed 500 in successive Ashes innings. We’re deep into pinch-me territory, and possibly beyond.

All smiles: Kevin Pietersen celebrates after reaching his double century

All smiles: Kevin Pietersen celebrates after reaching his double century

As Channel 9 filled the rain-ruined final session with highlights of England’s last-day collapse here four years ago, it was all too easy to compare Ricky Ponting’s current mob with Warne and McGrath– and to wonder whether this in any way devalued Pietersen’s strokeplay.

Yet there are few batsmen anywhere who would have dismantled even an attack as mediocre as this with as much panache and relish.

At Brisbane Pietersen sparkled briefly for 43 before ambition got the better of him. Now, resuming on the third morning at 85, he was damned if ego was going to get in the way after spending the best part of two days in pads waiting for one of Alastair Cook or Jonathan Trott to do the decent thing.

Back to his best: Pietersen dominated the Australian attack on the third day in Adelaide

Back to his best: Pietersen dominated the Australian attack on the third day in Adelaide

A square-drive for four off DougBollinger from the last ball of the first over signalled his intent,and at times the biggest irritant seemed to be the occasional spectatorwho disturbed his concentration behind the bowler’s arm. He certainlyfaced little disruption from Australia’s bowlers.

Hegreeted his own century, his first for 28 Test innings, with anorgasmic yelp; his 150 with something rather more chaste; and his 200–his second in Tests– with a clenched fist on one knee, like someparody of an ancient Greek Olympian. The photographers will have takennote.

Pietersen promised before this series he would rise to the occasion. He described himself during the warm-up matches as being‘on fire’, which sounded dangerously like pride before a fall. He has been booed to the crease. And he has delivered.

Big hit: Pietersen smashes a boundary at the Adelaide Oval

Big hit: Pietersen smashes a boundary at the Adelaide Oval

The trauma of 2006-07 here, when his 158 was part of a losing cause, has been erased. Australia called him FIGJAM back then (‘F*** I’m Good, Just Ask Me’), but there was little point sledging him now.

The traumas of the past 18 months– with the exception of a man of the series award at the World Twenty20– have been erased too. A man apart? Look at the way his team-mates cheered his landmarks. Embittered by the loss of the captaincy? Witness the joy. Hopeless against left-arm spin? Ask Xavier Doherty.

Ponting was powerless, and not merely because his bowling attack– newly revamped, don’t forget– veered between the popgun and the scattergun.

Under pressure: Doug Bollinger
Under pressure: Ryan Harris

Under pressure: Doug Bollinger (left) and Ryan Harris (right) have hardly troubled the England batsmen

Because of the weaponry at his disposal, Ponting was forced into tactics all captains dread: a 7-2 field, with bowlers instructed to bowl wide of off. Sometimes his men were capable of obeying; sometimes they drifted to leg; sometimes Pietersen simply whipped them from outside off. Whichever way you looked at it, it wasn’t pretty.

Pietersen’s brilliance overshadowed all else, including marathon-man Cook, who was dismissed for the first time since the opening day of the series, a whopping 10 days ago. But not before he had taken his series tally to 450 runs: a precocious teenager has become a man.

Paul Collingwood enjoyed himself in making 42, and Ian Bell glittered en route to 41 not out before the rain prevented any play after tea. It may yet save Australia too, although they scarcely deserve it.

England have embarrassed them. And no one has enjoyed it more than Pietersen.

 


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суббота, 4 декабря 2010 г.

ASHES 2010: Alastair Cook century puts England firmly in control in Adelaide - while Jonathan Trott and Kevin Pietersen help themselves to 50s | Mail Online

Alastair Cook produced yet another masterful performance as England strengthened their grip on the second Ashes Test in Adelaide.

Cook, who struck an unbeaten 235 in Brisbane last week, once again illustrated his ability to dominate the Australian attack after hitting an unbeaten 136.

Batting alongside Jonathan Trott, the duo gorged themselves on a buffet of below-par bowling on a batsman's paradise of wicket to put on 173 for the second wicket.

Terrible start: England captain Andrew Strauss leaves a straight one from Doug Bollinger and is bowled for one

Terrible start: England captain Andrew Strauss leaves a straight one from Doug Bollinger and is bowled for one

Kevin Pietersen remained unbeaten on 85 at the close, his highest score since hitting 80 against Pakistan at Edgbaston last summer, to help England move to 317-2 and a lead of 72.

This must have felt like Groundhog Day for Australia, who despite removing England captain Andrew Strauss for just a single run, were made to toil in the scorching Adelaide heat.

Following their unbeaten stand of 329 at the Gabba, Cook and Trott once again produced a stirring England rearguard action before launching a vicious assault on some tired and often wayward Australian bowling.

Chase that: Alastair Cook plunders another boundary as wicketkeeper Brad Haddin and Simon Katich look on

Chase that: Alastair Cook plunders another boundary as wicketkeeper Brad Haddin and Simon Katich look on

The dismissal of Strauss, who elected to leave a straight ball from Bollinger in the opening over of the day, sparked Australia into life.

But their hopes were firmly extinguished as the England pair showed class, courage and an ability to find the gaps at will to propel the tourists into pole position.

While Cook continued to feast on the generosity of the home bowling, Trott was afforded at least three fortunate escapes on his way to 78.

With England on 16-1, Trott came within a whisker of being run-out following a mix-up with Cook, but Xavier Doherty failed to hit the stumps from close-range.

Text book shot: Jonathan Trott en route to his 78

Text book shot: Jonathan Trott en route to his 78

DAY TWO SCORECARD

Overnight: Australia 245, England 1-0

ENGLAND - First innings continued

A Strauss

b Bollinger1
A Cook

not out136
J Trott

c Clarke b Harris78
K Pietersen

not out85
   Extras

6w 4b 5lb

15

    Total 
(2 wkts 89 overs)317

Fall:3, 176

To bat:P Collingwood, I Bell, M Prior, S Broad, G Swann, J Anderson, S Finn.

Bowling:Harris 19-4-51-1, Bollinger 15-0-76-1, Siddle 16-3-50-0, Watson 14-5-31-0, Doherty 15-3-70-0, North 10-0-28-0

Australia's fielding was sloppy throughout the day and Trott was once again the beneficiary of another mistake as Michael Hussey dropped a simple catch at gully off the bowling of Bollinger.

Head in hands, Australia captain Ricky Ponting was forced to watch as England helped themselves to boundaries on their way to 90-1 at lunch.

With plenty of food for thought, Australia once again set about trying to find a breakthrough with Trott almost looping a miss-timed drive into the hands of Siddle following a loose shot on the leg-side.

While Trott continued to ride his luck, Cook scythed through the Australian attack as England moved in on the home side's paltry first innings total of 245.

Peter Siddle thought he had his man when Cook appeared to edge behind to Brad Haddin but the Englishman referred the decision which correctly showed the ball only brushed the elbow and not the bat.

That only served to increase Australia's frustration and when Haddin dropped Trott off Ryan Harris, the hosts appeared to have lost any remnant of hope.

Trott's charmed life finally came to an end as Michael Clarke took held on to a drive at mid-wicket to give Harris his first wicket of the game and reduce England to 176-2.

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You're for the high jump: Kevin Pietersen forces Australian captain Ricky Ponting onto the back foot with another four

You're for the high jump: Kevin Pietersen forces Australian captain Ricky Ponting onto the back foot with another four

I've done it again: Alastair Cook celebrates a second successive Ashes century

I've done it again: Alastair Cook celebrates a second successive Ashes century

If that was supposed to signal a shift in momentum then clearly nobody had told England, who with Pietersen at the crease, went on the attack as they took control of the game.

Cook's 15th Test match century came courtesy of a boundary off another horrible Doherty delivery as the Essex man gave yet another emphatic answer to those who had questioned his ability to succeed Down Under.

Partnered by Pietersen, who raced to his 50 in 77 deliveries, Cook set about building a healthy lead as Australia's bowlers started to tire amid the unforgiving 38C heat.

Even when Australia eventually took the new ball with five overs of the day remaining, they failed to make the breakthrough they so badly craved.

Instead, Pietersen took full advantage of the new ball, hitting a number of classy boundaries on his way to an unbeaten 83 while Cook finished on 136 to leave England firmly in control.

 


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пятница, 3 декабря 2010 г.

Adelaide match zone: second Test, day one | Mail Online

Andrew Strauss lost the toss but he will have taken note of the statistics.

In the previous 10 Tests at Adelaide, the captain that has won the toss has elected to bat first every single time - but only two (Steve Waugh in 2001-02 and Ricky Ponting in 2004-05) have ended up on the winning side.

The side that has batted second has won six of those games - even if the Australians were the victors on five occasions.

Ricky Ponting of Australia tosses the coin with Andrew Strauss of England

In his six previous Ashes Tests as England captain, Strauss had won thetoss on five occasions - only losing ahead of the drawn game atEdgbaston in 2009.

After registering only one firstball duck in the first 14 years of his Test career, Ponting picked up his fourth in the past two years when he edged Jimmy Anderson to Graeme Swann. Four of the golden blobs have come at home.

Australia vice-captain Michael Clarke underwent a batting oneto- one with Ponting ahead of this game, but it didn't do him much good. Clarke's duck took his miserable sequence at Test level to 46 runs in his last six innings.

 



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четверг, 2 декабря 2010 г.

Adelaide uncovered: The Ashes - second Test | Mail Online

The headline in The Australian asked: 'Is it possible to take 20 wickets on the Adelaide pitch?' It's 16 years since all 40 wickets fell in an Adelaide T est, for the simple reason that it is one of the flattest in the world. A batsman's paradise and a bowler's nightmare.

Enlarge Australian bowler Ben Hilfenhaus (L) makes an unsuccessful appeal against England's Jonathan Trott

Hard going: The conditions may not suit Ben Hilfenhaus

The fast bowlers

Conventional swing bowling is generally a thankless task here, which may count against Ben Hilfenhaus. But reverse swing could come into play when the ball gets older - so long as the rain stays away. Glenn McGrath showed off his skills in the last Ashes Test here four years ago, and seamer Ryan Harris could be chosen this time for his reverse-swing prowess. England's three frontline seamers can all reverse it, as can standby quickie Ajmal Shahzad.

The spinners

New groundsman Damian Hough has promised assistance for the spinners on the last two days, but that is a familiar assurance the world over. No visiting spinner has claimed five wickets for fewer than 100 runs in a Test innings here since India's Rusi Surti in 1967-68. Even Shane Warne took his wickets at 30 apiece.

The boundary

Adelaide is uniquely shaped: long straight boundaries that can yield all-run fours, and short square ones. That means Graeme Swann will have to be careful not to bowl short to Mike Hussey, as he did at the Gabba: pull shots that earned Hussey four runs in Brisbane could collect six.

Enlarge The Adelaide Oval

Picture perfect: The Adelaide Oval

The atmosphere

The Gabba's concrete sports stadium makes way for Adelaide's picturesque cricket ground - one of the prettiest on the international circuit. The new Western Grandstand redevelopment fits in nicely with the feel of the venue and St Peter's Cathedral can still be spied in the background.

The bounce

Although the Gabba didn't produce as much bounce as had been expected, Adelaide will produce even less. T hat places the onus on England's taller bowlers - Stuart Broad and Steven Finn - to get their lengths right. Hit-the-deck quickies like Peter Siddle and Doug Bollinger are more likely to feel at home.

The baggage

If Australian cricketers still wake up in a cold sweat about Headingley '81, the English shudder at the thought of Adelaide '06. The side led by Andrew Flintoff froze on the final day with a draw a near certainty, and ended up losing after declaring their first innings on 551 for six. That will be sure to get an airing in the week ahead.



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среда, 1 декабря 2010 г.

ASHES 2010: Kevin Pietersen vents his fury at 'pathetic' Adelaide groundsman on Twitter | Mail Online

Kevin Pietersen made his anger clear to thousands on Twitter this morning when he was unable to practise batting outside because of rain water on the Adelaide Oval nets.

How can I practice on this? Kevin Pietersen was denied by wet nets

How can I practice on this? Kevin Pietersen was denied by wet nets

Pietersen, who was fined by the ECB following a foul-mouthed Twitter rant after being dropped from the England one-day team in August, appeared to blame groundstaff for failing to cover the nets as soon as it began to rain.

England instead had to practise indoors, in preparation for the start of the second Ashes Test on Friday.

Pietersen, who was denied a second innings in the first Test in Brisbane when the three above him in the England order all made centuries to draw the match, asked his Twitter followers: 'What should a groundsmen {sic} make sure he does 2days out from a test match????'

Minutes later, he provided the answer himself - and an apparent comment on the situation.

'Cover the nets when it rains maybe???

'PATHETIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!'

A spokesman for the South Australia Cricket Association explained the nets were uncovered for only a matter of a few minutes - 'not even 10' - and that groundsman Damian Hough's staff had to prioritise protecting the Test match pitch first, once the rain began to fall.

An England spokesman confirmed the tourists are not seeking to blame anyone or make any complaints.

'It is frustrating when we can't practise outdoors. We hope we can tomorrow,' he said.

Australia were able to use the outdoor nets this morning, when there were just two light showers. More persistent rain arrived, as forecast, at lunchtime - and wiped out England's planned afternoon practice outside.

 



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