Warne Gives Aussies the Edge

Cricket: The Ashes Shane Warne took five wickets as England collapsed to 319-7 at the close of an intriguing first day of the final Test.
In their pre-match team talk last night, England's dream scenario would have gone something like this: win the toss, bat first on a flat deck, see off a rusty Glenn McGrath, tuck in to Brett Lee and Shaun Tait, score at four an over. Simple. All their wishes came true in the first hour at The Oval - and then Shane Warne lumbered into the fray like the ultimate pantomime villain.

Warne, at his most majestic and magnetic, took five wickets to leave England tottering on 319 for 7, a below-par score on a belting pitch, after Michael Vaughan won an important toss.

Warne was simply magnificent. The ball did not turn much but Warne did not need it to. He probed and schemed and lured Marcus Trescothick, Vaughan, Ian Bell, Kevin Pietersen and, finally, century-maker Andrew Strauss, under his spell. Spinners aren't supposed to bowl before lunch on the first day, let alone take five wickets in double-quick time. But Warne makes his own rules.

His splendour was needed after England got off to an absolute flyer. Trescothick and Strauss began with a policy of controlled aggression, but they were aided by the excessive aggression of Australia's new-ball bowlers. With their eyes widening greedily at a pitch offering plentiful bounce, Glenn McGrath, occasionally, and Brett Lee, frequently, were too short in their opening spells and allowed England to get away.

Trescothick justly survived a big shout for lbw early on when he played round a Lee inswinger, but other than that he was in princely form, timing the ball as sweetly as he has ever since his thumping 90 on the first morning at Edgbaston changed the mood of the series. His feet still don't move much, but nobody seems to notice anymore.

Within 12 overs, Ricky Ponting's finger was pressed pensively to his lips and the sweepers were back on the boundary. Not even they could stop the errant Shaun Tait haemorrhaging runs, however: whereas Lee was too short he was far too full, and his five overs went for 33 runs.

Predictably it was Warne who hustled Australia back into the contest with a wicket in his third over. Trescothick's crooked push off the back foot flew fast and low towards Matthew Hayden at slip, who jerked his body round to clutch a stunning catch just before the ball thudded into his left instep to leave England at 82-1. Trescothick made 43, another charming yet ultimately unfulfilled innings to add to his series portfolio.

Warne was in amongst it again 15 minutes before lunch, taking the crucial wicket of the England captain for 11. Vaughan rocked back to whip through midwicket, but the ball popped a bit off the pitch and he could only find the diving Michael Clarke at midwicket. Still, it was a poor stroke.

When Bell then went without scoring, transfixed by the Warne slider for the second time in this series and trapped plumb in front, and England had gone from riches to rags inside an hour. The lunch break came and went, and so did Pietersen - who played all around a straight one - before being bowled for 11.

At that stage England were rocking on 131-4, but Strauss (127) and Flintoff (72) dug in. Helped by the pitch, which offered the Australian seamers very little help - as well as some stiff-collar-tight batting, they put on 141 together to leave England on 275-4 and seemingly set for a big score. Then, frustratingly, came a traditional England mini-batting collapse. First Flintoff nicked McGrath behind to Warne at first slip, then Collingwood was trapped by Tait's vicious reverse swinging yorker which hit him outside off stump. Soon afterwards, Warne magicked a delivery which the tiring Strauss, bat-padded to Simon Katich at silly point.

Geraint Jones and Ashley Giles survived the no ball, but Australia will feel that it was their day. It's a sign of how far England have come that a score of 319 for 7 against the best side in the world is a tad disappointing.

© Guardian News & Media 2008
Published: 9/8/2005
 
Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.
Your Comments:
Your Name:
Use the form below to email this article to your friends.
Recipient Email Address:
 Separate multiple email addresses by ;
Your Name:
Your Email Address: