Kevin Pietersen and England consistently Jonathan Trott rounds after losing both openers for the first hour of the second day of the Melbourne test.
England took a big step towards retaining the Ashes after bowling Australia for a paltry 98 and then set an entry of 59 first-round lead at the end of the first day of the fourth round in Melbourne.
Australia, sent to bat after England captain Andrew Strauss won a major draw, were dismissed for their lowest score in 133 years of testing with the ashes of famous MCG.
Pacemen James Anderson and Chris Tremlett took four branches to the head, Tim Bresnan, was invited to the England squad to replace Steve Finn, chipping and two others on the ground in an early stage business.
But it was the best performance in the home batsmen, led to strong as Alastair Cook and Strauss opens England had established an unbroken stand of 157 strains.
With the series level 1-1, with England a victory to keep their hands on the trophy the most emblematic of cricket and are given every opportunity as they hit a lot after losing in the third test in Perth.
"We've been good to bounce back strongly, so we expected nothing less but to do so with strength was probably not in the cards," Anderson told Sky Sports.
A massive Boxing Day crowd of 84,345 fans at the MCG are presented to show the home side succumbed to a short ball from 43 overs with Michael Clarke top scored with 20, drummer and only five in double figures.
When the sun came out and the joke was easier, Strauss (64 not out) and Cook (80 not out) the Australian bowling attack look pedestrian in Perth with Mitchell Johnson, the hero of his six expensive transfers.
It completed a miserable day for the pressure Australian captain Ricky Ponting, who batting with a broken finger slightly left, yet when he edged Tremlett excellent (26.04) Graeme Swann at second slip to 10.
Anderson (4-44) have been the prized wicket Clarke and Mike Hussey, his first failure of a series of both closed early.
Bresnan, who came and rested on the Finn, including his role in the wickets of opener Philip Hughes and Brad Haddin, who played a key role in the rebirth of less than Brisbane and Perth.
For More watch : BBC
England took a big step towards retaining the Ashes after bowling Australia for a paltry 98 and then set an entry of 59 first-round lead at the end of the first day of the fourth round in Melbourne.
Australia, sent to bat after England captain Andrew Strauss won a major draw, were dismissed for their lowest score in 133 years of testing with the ashes of famous MCG.
Pacemen James Anderson and Chris Tremlett took four branches to the head, Tim Bresnan, was invited to the England squad to replace Steve Finn, chipping and two others on the ground in an early stage business.
But it was the best performance in the home batsmen, led to strong as Alastair Cook and Strauss opens England had established an unbroken stand of 157 strains.
With the series level 1-1, with England a victory to keep their hands on the trophy the most emblematic of cricket and are given every opportunity as they hit a lot after losing in the third test in Perth.
"We've been good to bounce back strongly, so we expected nothing less but to do so with strength was probably not in the cards," Anderson told Sky Sports.
A massive Boxing Day crowd of 84,345 fans at the MCG are presented to show the home side succumbed to a short ball from 43 overs with Michael Clarke top scored with 20, drummer and only five in double figures.
When the sun came out and the joke was easier, Strauss (64 not out) and Cook (80 not out) the Australian bowling attack look pedestrian in Perth with Mitchell Johnson, the hero of his six expensive transfers.
It completed a miserable day for the pressure Australian captain Ricky Ponting, who batting with a broken finger slightly left, yet when he edged Tremlett excellent (26.04) Graeme Swann at second slip to 10.
Anderson (4-44) have been the prized wicket Clarke and Mike Hussey, his first failure of a series of both closed early.
Bresnan, who came and rested on the Finn, including his role in the wickets of opener Philip Hughes and Brad Haddin, who played a key role in the rebirth of less than Brisbane and Perth.
For More watch : BBC

Comments
Post a Comment